Suara Malaysia
ADVERTISEMENTFly London from Kuala LumpurFly London from Kuala Lumpur
Friday, November 22, 2024
More
    ADVERTISEMENTFly London from Kuala LumpurFly London from Kuala Lumpur
    HomeNewsHeadlinesNepal lifts ban on video-sharing platform TikTok

    Nepal lifts ban on video-sharing platform TikTok

    -

    Fly AirAsia from Kuala Lumpur

    KATHMANDU: Nepal on Aug 22 lifted its ban on TikTok nine months after suspending the popular video-sharing platform for disturbing “social harmony”, the communications minister said.

    TikTok, which has around one billion monthly users, has faced restrictions in many countries for allegedly breaking data rules and for its potentially harmful impact on youth.

    “A decision to remove the ban on TikTok has been made,” Minister for Communications and Information Technology Prithvi Subba Gurung told reporters after a cabinet meeting.

    The decision comes over a week after TikTok’s South Asia division contacted the minister saying that it would follow Nepal’s regulations, and requesting that the ban be lifted, according to ministry spokesman Gajendra Kumar Thakur.

    Nepal had suspended TikTok in November last year, days after introducing a directive requiring social media platforms operating in the country to set up offices.

    It also followed an anti-government demonstration, whose leader was popular on TikTok.

    The ban was condemned not just by free speech advocates but by the owners of popular accounts whose lives were transformed by the platform, which had about 2.2 million users in the country.

    “The news makes me very happy,” Anjana Aryal, who went from homemaker to entrepreneur by sharing recipes on TikTok, told AFP.

    “The ban had really affected many creators like me who had benefitted from the app.”

    Since the ban, Aryal and other prominent Nepali content creators had seen their revenue streams dry up, jeopardising their livelihoods.

    “Many switched to Instagram and Facebook, but they don’t have the same kind of reach. With TikTok back, I will be very busy again,” she said.

    ALSO READ:  MCMC to tackle online harm, may make social media platforms pay for news content

    Advocate Dinesh Tripathi, who had challenged the decision in court, said that the decision was a “victory for free speech”.

    “Free speech is integral to democracy. This is a good decision but we must stay vigilant against such attacks,” he said.

    In July, Nepal’s Khadga Prasad Sharma Oli, 72, was sworn in as prime minister after his Communist Party forged a coalition government with the centre-left Nepali Congress, shifting power in the country’s often volatile parliament.

    Owned by Beijing-based ByteDance, TikTok is one of the most popular social media platforms on the planet, but multiple countries have sought to tighten controls on social media due to their potential impact.

    The United States recently sued TikTok, saying it had placed the safety of millions of children in jeopardy by collecting their personal data without parental permission.

    TikTok is also battling a US law that calls on its Chinese parent ByteDance to sell the video platform or else face a nationwide ban on the app. – AFP

    Wan
    Wan
    Dedicated wordsmith and passionate storyteller, on a mission to captivate minds and ignite imaginations.

    Related articles

    ADVERTISEMENTFly London from Kuala Lumpur

    Subscribe to Newsletter

    To be updated with all the latest news, offers and special announcements.

    Latest posts