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Yes, Iran does ban Twitter
When citizen protests erupted in Iran after the government admitted its forces mistakenly shot down a Ukrainian airliner, killing all 176 passengers, President Donald Trump responded with a tweet that was indecipherable to the vast majority of his 71 million followers.
Writing Jan. 11 in Farsi, the predominant and official language in Iran, Trump noted the protests and said he stood with the Iranian people.
Responding with a tweet of her own, Trump’s daughter and White House adviser Ivanka Trump echoed a Washington Examiner headline in saying:
"President Trump’s message in Farsi supporting Iranian protesters is the most liked Persian tweet in history of Twitter."
We’re leaving aside Ivanka Trump's claim. But we do want to check a response that seemed to contradict her.
A Facebook user shared both Ivanka Trump’s tweet and a response to it from Business Insider politics reporter John Haltiwanger. He tweeted:
"Twitter is banned in Iran."
The post was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat potential false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Facebook.)
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The reporter is right, as a number of media accounts have confirmed.
The day after the Facebook post was published, The Telegraph reported on censorship in Iran. Twitter, the British news outlet said, is among the platforms that are banned for ordinary Iranians, even though top government officials use it.
In fact, Twitter, as well as Facebook, have been banned since 2009, although many Iranians find ways to use them, according to the New York Times.
Before the blackouts, activists had used Twitter and Facebook to organize mass protests and document a crackdown after a disputed election in 2009, according to the Associated Press.
And in the days just prior to the protests over the downed airliner, the Washington Post also noted that Twitter is blocked in Iran — even though President Hassan Rouhani and Ayatollah Ali Khamenei are active Twitter users and many ordinary Iranians figure out ways to tweet.
A Facebook post declares: "Twitter is banned in Iran."
Officially, it is, though many Iranians find a way to use the platform, as does the country’s top leaders.
We rate the statement True.
Our Sources
Facebook, post, Jan. 13, 2020
Washington Examiner, "Trump sends 'the most liked Persian tweet' in history of Twitter," Jan. 11, 2020
The Telegraph, "Iran BLACKOUT: Is Twitter banned in Iran? How rebels publicise their plight online," Jan. 14, 2020
New York Times, "Iranian Authorities Block Access to Social Media Tools," Jan. 2, 2018
Washington Post, "If any Iranians supported Soleimani’s killing, it would’ve been dissidents on Twitter. The opposite happened," Jan. 8, 2020
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Yes, Iran does ban Twitter
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