
Top Russian MP advises Telegram's Durov to leave France
Telegram founder Pavel Durov should leave France as soon as possible following his claims that the country's foreign intelligence agency, the DGSE, pressured him to censor conservative voices on his platform, Russian MP Aleksey Zhuravlev has said.
Earlier in May, Durov accused the DGSE of attempting to interfere in Romania's elections by pushing for censorship on Telegram, which he allegedly refused. The spy agency denied the allegations, but the tech entrepreneur doubled down, accusing Paris of abusing 'terror' and 'child porn' investigations as a pretext to pursue a political agenda.
'I would advise him to leave France at the first opportunity – the risk of ending up behind bars again is too high, especially if he continues to resist the demands of the French intelligence services,' said Aleksey Zhuravlev, First Deputy Chairman of the State Duma Defense Committee, in an interview with RIA Novosti on Saturday.
Durov, whose company is based in Dubai, was arrested in France in August 2024 on charges of complicity in crimes allegedly committed by Telegram users, including extremism and child abuse. He was later released on €5 million ($5.46 million) bail. Although he was allowed to travel to the UAE in March, his recent request to visit the US was denied, and he remains under restricted supervision.
'[Durov] himself said that the DGSE, France's external intelligence agency, demanded that Telegram organize a campaign against right-wing politicians in Romania,' Zhuravlev said, questioning the conditions of Durov's release and noting that the tech entrepreneur is still restricted from international travel.
'It is more useful to always keep such an influential person in the field of new media within arm's reach,' he added.
Zhuravlev argued that Durov has likely come to fully grasp the nature of 'Western democracy,' where, he claimed, the law can be bent to suit political aims. However, he suggested that Durov remains unable to extricate himself from the situation, possibly due to compromising material being held against him.Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova also weighed in, accusing French President Emmanuel Macron of using 'barbaric' methods to advance his foreign policy agenda.
'It turns out that [President Emmanuel] Macron had Durov arrested not even to address internal issues with the messenger, but to influence the elections in Romania – realizing that the candidate from the liberal dictatorship wouldn't be able to win under any legal circumstances,' Zakharova wrote on Telegram on Saturday.
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