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dpa
Tehran
Iran’s parliament on Wednesday passed legislation to toughen internet censorship, after a protracted back and forth between opponents and supporters in a country where information is already tightly controlled.
The measure was approved with the support of 121 lawmakers out of 209 present, although it must still receive a final go-ahead from the Guardian Council, the Islamic Republic’s powerful constitutional vetting body.
The bill, initiated by hardliners in parliament and the subject of debate for years, had sparked fierce criticism across the country.
Supporters say the legislation is needed in order to better supervise social media and messenger platforms, and to begin a nationalization of the internet - in other words, the creation of Iranian alternatives to popular foreign services.
Critics fear that many of the global platforms will be crippled. In addition, according to the bill, all internet users will be registered and all VPN applications, which Iranians use to bypass internet blocks, will be banned.
The internet has been a thorn in the side of the Islamic establishment because it has undermined state-controlled media.
In those outlets, for example, reports on riots or public protests could be censored.
But young people in particular now only follow political developments via the internet, especially on Twitter, and ignore the state-controlled media.
According to a survey by Iranian research group ISPA, more than 70 per cent of Iranians use WhatsApp, but only 5 per cent use Iran’s Sorush messenger. The new law could also put WhatsApp on the banned list.
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29/07/2021
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