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Tweet and Retreat: Reuters Returns After Legal Glitch on X


Updated: July 07, 2025 08:21

Image Source: Photonews Pakistan

Reuters' X official account was abruptly suspended in India during the weekend, sending panic and bewilderment throughout the media globe. The account and its Reuters World handle were suspended July 6 following what X termed as a legal request. Both were restored within 24 hours after the Indian government explained that it had not made such a request.

Restoration Highlights

X told Reuters that access to its Indian account was no longer being blocked

The suspension notice mentioned compliance with India's Information Technology Act, 2000

Reuters own publications such as Reuters Tech News and Reuters Asia were available throughout

India's government's Press Information Bureau has confirmed that no agency had blocked the site.

The authorities collaborated with X to resolve the matter, labeling the suspension as a seeming enforcement error

Background: Operation Sindoor

The block may have been initiated by a May 7 Operation Sindoor order that focused on the shutdown of hundreds of accounts

The story of Reuters was not affected at first, but X appears to have obeyed the earlier instruction late

Other media outlets like Global Times and TRT World also experienced the same temporary suspensions

They were informed by the government that they no longer needed the blocks and requested X to demolish them

Contemporary Tensions

The incident reflects ongoing tension between Indian officials and X over content moderation

It sued the government in March for a new government portal it claims grants takedown powers that are too broad.

India argues that the portal merely provides a platform regulator interface

What It Means

The speedy restoration bears witness to the fragility of media freedom and the complexity of cyber governance

It also demands more accurate procedures between the governments and technology platforms to avoid these mistakes For now, Reuters is back online in India—but the wider debate on content control has only just started

Sources: Reuters, Times Now, Deccan Chronicle, Devdiscourse, The Straits Times

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