Telegram challenges India app ban, calls move unconstitutional
The Telegram messaging app has challenged an Indian government order that temporarily blocked access to its platform to prevent exam fraud, claiming in a New Delhi court that the measure is unconstitutional and amounts to a disproportionate restriction on free speech. The extrao
The Telegram messaging app has challenged an Indian government order that temporarily blocked access to its platform to prevent exam fraud, claiming in a New Delhi court that the measure is unconstitutional and amounts to a disproportionate restriction on free speech.
The extraordinary order came into effect on Tuesday in an attempt to curb channels claiming to have obtained examination papers in advance, but has prompted a debate over the use of such blanket bans.
In its filing on Wednesday, Telegram argued the governmentโs action was โunconstitutionalโ, a โgrossly disproportionateโ measure and an โoverbroad restriction on the fundamental right to freedom of speech of usersโ.
It warned that allowing the ban to remain in place would โenable indiscriminate suspension of digital platformsโ and amount to a โblanket shutdownโ of a service used by more than 150 million people in India.
The company also said the blocking order failed to consider that hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of students and educators rely on Telegram to access study materials and communicate with coaching institutions.
Activists have long argued that the legal provision used to impose such restrictions can be used to curb free speech, although Prime Minister Narendra Modiโs government says it acts in accordance with the law and in the public interest.
Telegram founder Pavel Durov on Wednesday questioned the effectiveness of the ban in preventing exam leaks, saying it punished the platformโs 150 million Indian users rather than โthe insiders who leaked the exam materialsโ.
Last month, the government cancelled a key undergraduate entrance examination for medical schools, known as the National Eligibility-cum-Entrance Test (NEET), after authorities discovered that questions had been leaked in advance.

