Since Pavel Durov, the Russian-born billionaire and founding father of the Telegram messaging app, was arrested on touchdown in Paris on Saturday night, there was extra hypothesis than substance about his destiny.
The headline in a Russian newspaper summed up the story: “The arrest (or detention) of ‘Russia’s Zuckerberg’, Pavel Durov, is among the most essential, however mysterious world information tales,” declared Nezavisimaya Gazeta.
True.
Besides that “mysterious” is a little bit of an understatement.
Why did French police detain him? What costs will he face? Has it something in any respect to do together with his latest go to to Azerbaijan, the place he met (or didn’t meet) Russian President Vladimir Putin?
For 2 days, reporters have quoted “sources near the investigation” in regards to the offences Pavel Durov could also be charged with (allegedly, from complicity in drug-trafficking to fraud). Telegram put out an announcement saying Mr Durov had “nothing to cover”.
On Monday night, the Paris prosecutor stated in an announcement that Mr Durov was being held in custody as a part of a cyber-criminality investigation.
The assertion talked about 12 totally different offences underneath investigation that it stated had been linked to organised crime.
These included illicit transactions, baby pornography, fraud and the refusal to reveal info to authorities, the prosecutor stated.
The assertion added that Mr Durov’s time in custody had been prolonged and will now final till Wednesday.
With out going into element, President Emmanuel Macron posted on social media that he had seen “false info” concerning France following Mr Durov’s arrest, and added: “That is under no circumstances a political determination. It’s as much as the judges to determine.”
In Moscow, the Kremlin is being cautious.
“We nonetheless don’t know what precisely Durov has been accused of,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov instructed journalists on Monday, in his first feedback on Pavel Durov’s detention.
“We haven’t heard any official statements. Earlier than I can say something in any respect about this, we’d like some readability.”
Readability just isn’t one thing of which everybody in Russia feels the necessity.
On Monday, state TV’s flagship political speak present had loads to say on the matter.
“All these accusations towards Durov sound absurd,” one political analyst within the studio declared. “Accusing him of all of the crimes which can be dedicated on his platform is like accusing [France’s] President Macron of all of the crimes that occur in France. It’s the identical logic.”
Russian newspapers, too, went massive on the story. A number of dailies expressed concern that Pavel Durov’s arrest might have critical penalties for Russia.
“This blow to Telegram threatens to be a blow to Russia,” wrote Nezavisimaya Gazeta. “With Pavel Durov’s arrest, Western intelligence providers might acquire the messenger’s encryption keys.”
“Telegram may develop into a instrument of Nato, if Pavel Durov is compelled to obey the French intelligence providers,” declared Moskovsky Komsomolets, including: “Telegram chats comprise an enormous quantity of vitally essential, strategic info.”
In April 2018, the Russian authorities started blocking entry to Telegram, solely to raise the ban in 2020. As we speak, not solely do Russian officers use the messenger, however so does the Russian army, together with troopers preventing within the so-called “Particular Army Operation” (Russia’s struggle in Ukraine).
“If Telegram crashes,” Moskovsky Komsomolets requested at the moment, “how is [our army] going to combat?”
Within the West, Pavel Durov’s detention has sparked a debate about free speech.
In Russia, too, presidential human rights ombudsman Tatyana Moskalkova claimed that “the true purpose for arresting Pavel Durov was to close down Telegram, a platform the place you possibly can uncover the reality about what’s occurring on the planet. Everybody who strives at no cost speech protests this.”
Ms Moskalkova made no point out of the Sign messaging app, to which the Russian authorities blocked entry earlier this month, or YouTube, entry to which has been severely restricted now in Russia. Fb and Instagram have already been blocked right here.
And what of these rumours of a Putin-Durov assembly in Baku earlier in August. Was there one?
“No,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov replied once I requested.
Nevertheless this mysterious story ends, Moscow will use it to strengthen considered one of its official narratives: that Russian residents ought to watch out for the West.
As the favored tabloid Komsomolskaya Pravda put it: “For the West, there isn’t any such factor any extra as ‘good Russians’.”