Mobile phone companies in Brazil have been ordered by a court to impose a block of the popular WhatsApp smartphone application for two days.
A court in Sao Paulo state made the order because it said WhatsApp had repeatedly failed to co-operate in a criminal investigation.
It is not clear if mobile companies will fully comply with the order.
Facebook owns the app. Its chief executive Mark Zuckerberg said he was “stunned” by the “extreme” ruling.
WhatsApp is reported to be the most used application in Brazil, with about 93 million users.
The TechCrunch website says that it is used by 93% of the country’s internet population and is especially popular among young people and the poor who take advantage of its free text message and internet voice telephone service.
It says Brazilians spend almost double the time on social media as Americans.
The application is also widely used by business people and Brazilians living abroad to communicate with family back home.
“We are disappointed in the short-sighted decision to cut off access to WhatsApp, a communication tool that so many Brazilians have come to depend on, and sad to see Brazil isolate itself from the rest of the world,” WhatsApp chief executive Jan Koum said in a statement posted on Facebook.
Mr Zuckerberg was also highly critical of the ruling.
“This is a sad day for Brazil. Until today, Brazil has been an ally in creating an open internet. Brazilians have always been among the most passionate in sharing their voice online,” he wrote.
“I am stunned that our efforts to protect people’s data would result in such an extreme decision by a single judge to punish every person in Brazil who uses WhatsApp.”
Local media said the order to suspend the services was related to a drug trafficking trial in the Sao Paulo State Justice Tribunal.
Folha newspaper said that as part of an investigation into an alleged gang member, the court tried to get access to his WhatsApp messages.
Source – Joynews