France's Macron says giving Telegram CEO Durov French citizenship was a good thing
French President Emmanuel Macron is defending his government’s decision to give special fast-track citizenship to Telegram messaging app CEO Pavel Durov
BELGRADE, Serbia (AP) — French President Emmanuel Macron on Thursday defended his decision to give special fast-track citizenship to Telegram messaging app CEO Pavel Durov, who is now under preliminary charges in France over alleged criminal activity on his popular platform.
Macron also said he was unaware that Durov was coming to France before his surprise weekend arrest, and had no plans to meet with him.
Free-speech advocates, far-right figures and authoritarian governments around the world have spoken out in Durov’s defense and criticized French authorities over the case. Durov was freed on 5 million euro bail but barred from leaving France and ordered to report to a police station twice a week pending further investigation.
French prosecutors accuse Durov of complicity in allowing drug trafficking and sharing of sexual images of children on Telegram, and of refusing to cooperate with authorities investigating illegal activity on the app.