Albania starts turning off TikTok amid concern over youth violence
14/3/2025 6:13
TikTok users in Albania are
experiencing difficulties accessing the popular short video app
after a one-year government ban took effect on Thursday,
prompted by concerns that social media is fuelling youth
violence in and outside school.
Albania's move follows bans or partial bans in at least
20 other countries amid worries about improper videos or
security concerns linked to TikTok owner ByteDance and its
proximity to the Chinese government.
Some users in Albania said they were unable to access the
platform via web browsers after midday.
"I can see that TikTok is no longer accessible on the web
but the app is still working, for now," said Ermal Hoxha, 28,
from Tirana. Each time he tried to access the site, he received
an error message: "This site can't be reached. Check if there is
a typo in www.tiktok.com."
Similar issues were reported by other users and a government
official told Reuters that after web browsers the ban will be
extended to include the app too.
Albania's National Authority for Cybersecurity (AKSK) has
ordered all internet providers in the country to submit written
confirmation that TikTok will be turned off by Thursday.
The decision to ban TikTok was made last December, a month
after a 14-year-old boy was stabbed to death by a fellow pupil
following arguments on social media.
TikTok had said it was seeking further clarification from
the Albanian government since their findings allegedly showed
that the "videos leading up to this incident (the stabbing) were
being posted on another platform, not TikTok".
CENSORSHIP?
Isa Myzyraj, the head of the Association of Journalists in
Albania (AJA), said the group would take the case to the
Constitutional Court, arguing that the ban restricts freedom of
expression and constitutes censorship.
"We fear that, in the same way, the government may also shut
down other social networks and one day even ban the internet
entirely," Myzyraj said.
Opposition parties have accused Prime Minister Edi Rama of
seeking to silence dissent by shutting down a platform often
used to voice criticism, especially when - in their view - the
government is increasing its control of mainstream media. Rama's
government denies this accusation.
The Democratic Party, the largest opposition party, has
called for a protest on Saturday in front of the government
offices to oppose the TikTok ban.
Rama has accused the app of showing videos outside China of
"only scum and scoundrels".
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