Telegram’s Russian-born founder Pavel Durov said late Tuesday he was not going to bow to pressure from Russian authorities, writing the app “stands for freedom and privacy, no matter the pressure.”
Russia’s state communications watchdog said earlier in the day that the popular messaging app would face further restrictions from authorities because it failed to correct previous violations.Ā
Users reported slow traffic and lagging downloadsĀ throughout Tuesday as Russia moved to tighten controls on the key channel for both public and private communication in the country.
Regulator suggests ‘phased restrictions’ onĀ Telegram
Russia’s communications regulator Roskomnadzor said in a statement cited by state media that it will “continue to introduce phased restrictions” on Telegram, for not complyingĀ with Russian laws.
“As before, Russian law is not being observed, personal data is not protected, and there are no effective measures to counter fraud and the use of the messaging āapp for criminal and terrorist purposes,” the statement said.
The laws require companies to store Russian users’ data inside the country and to take steps to prevent platforms from being used for what Moscow calls criminal or “terrorist purposes.”
“It is a great shame that the company is not ācarrying out ālaws that need to be observed,” Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said.
State news agency RIA said Telegram faces up to 64 million rubles ($827,000, ā¬695,000) in fines in eight upcoming court hearings, with bailiffs also seeking to collect a further 9 million rubles in unpaid penalties.
Telegram boss says will fight back Russia attempts to limit access to app
Durov defended the appĀ saying the measures were aimed at pushing users toward a “state-backed alternative built for surveillance and political censorship.”
TheĀ entrepreneur wasĀ likely alluding to the MAX messenger, which was launched by Russia last year.
“Restricting citizens’ freedom is never the right answer,” he said. “Telegram stands for freedom of speech and privacy, no matter the pressure.”
Russia had previously attempted to block Telegram but failed to restrict access and lifted the ban in 2020.
Durov, who also holds French and Emirati citizenship, was arrested in France in 2024 as part of an investigation into crimes related to child pornography, drug trafficking and fraudulent transactions linked to use of the app.
According to Durov, Telegram is not perfect, but he denied that the app actively enabled crime.
France lifted travel restrictions on him in July 2025 but the investigation is ongoing.
Russians decry Telegram restrictions
Telegram is widely used in Russia by Kremlin officials, media, businesses,Ā the exiled oppositionĀ and the military.
Some pro-war bloggers also resisted the government move raising alarm that it would jeopardize communications from the front line and in Russian-occupied territory.
“People’s positions will now mostly be conveyed to the outside world not by people, but by our masters of the foreign ministry,” the Two Majors channel, one of Russia’s most widely read military correspondents, posted.
Anna, a Moscow resident, told Reuters news agency that all her friends and family use Telegram.
“I don’t know how I’m going to communicate with them because I don’t want to move to other platforms.”
Telegram ā the alternative to WhatsApp
Edited by: Roshni MajumdarĀ
















