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Telegram CEO charged by French authorities over alleged criminality on messaging app

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Telegram chief executive Pavel Durov was charged by a French judge on Wednesday over alleged criminal activity on the messaging app, and barred from leaving France.

Durov was indicted on multiple charges as part of an investigation into Telegram’s alleged failure to address criminality on the app, including enabling money laundering, drug trafficking and the distribution of child sexual abuse content, prosecutors said.

He has been freed from custody but placed under judicial supervision, and must provide €5mn as a bail deposit, report to police twice a week and not leave French territory, the prosecutors added.

Durov, a Russia-born billionaire who now holds French and Emirati citizenship, was arrested after flying into Le Bourget airport outside Paris on Saturday.

He has been questioned by investigators for four days as part of the inquiry by prosecutors. Telegram did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Durov’s detention has become a flashpoint for an ongoing global debate over the extent to which social media platforms should prioritise free speech over online safety.

Since its launch in 2013, Dubai-based Telegram has grown to have 1bn users, with its chief executive resisting government interference and calls for stronger moderation of content.

Durov’s arrest has also ignited tensions between France and Russia. Moscow has argued the arrest was politically motivated, a claim denied by French President Emmanuel Macron.

Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov said on Tuesday that relations between Moscow and Paris were at an all-time low over the move, suggesting Durov had been arrested so that the French authorities could access Telegram’s encryption keys. 

France’s justice system has a Chinese wall between the government and investigators, with no mechanism in place to report sensitive probes to officials.

A person close to Macron said the president and his office had no knowledge of the probe prior to Durov’s arrest.

After Durov’s arrest, Telegram said its founder had “nothing to hide” and that it was “absurd to claim that a platform or its owner was responsible for abuse of that platform”.

Durov was dubbed the “Mark Zuckerberg of Russia” after co-founding its most popular social media network, VKontakte.

But he fled the country in 2014 after allegedly refusing to comply with Moscow’s demands for access to certain Ukrainian user data.

He has built ties in France over the past decade and was granted citizenship in 2021.

Macron had lunch with Durov in 2018, according to a person with knowledge of the situation.

“Macron meets CEOs and entrepreneurs all the time to discuss business and investment, so it was in that context,” the person said, adding that the president and Durov had met “one or two times” but not in recent years. The lunch was first reported by the Wall Street Journal.