
Telegram boss Durov speaks out before French hearing, hopes to get charges lifted
He recently gave a rare interview, his longest-ever, to Guillaume Grallet, Technology Reporter for Le Point magazine and the face of Tech 24 on FRANCE 24's French channel.
In the interview, Durov reveals his plan to bequeath his wealth equally among his more than 100 sperm-donor children and his six other children. He praises Meredith Whittaker of rival messaging app Signal, who's been critical of Telegram 's own encryption policy. Durov also details his turbulent relationship with French President Emmanuel Macron, saying they used to text regularly, but that now he would not even agree to meet the French president – and has, in fact, left him on read. He accuses France 's spy agency, the DGSE, of trying to pressure Telegram to remove accounts belonging to supporters of conservative candidates in the Romanian election. The DGSE has responded by denying this, saying that Durov has a "curious relationship with the truth."
Durov also shared that he would have his third audience with the French investigating magistrate overseeing his case later this month, as he hopes to get the charges lifted, avoiding a trial and possible long prison sentence.
Grallet spoke to Tech 24 in this edition, sharing his insights from a decade's work on Durov.

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France 24
6 hours ago
- France 24
E.Guinea launches ICJ case against France over Paris mansion
The west African nation asked the International Court of Justice to issue emergency orders against France over a building seized after the conviction of Vice President Teodorin Obiang for corruption. It asked the court to order France not to sell the mansion, located on the upscale Avenue Foch near the Arc de Triomphe in Paris, which the two countries have been squabbling over for several years. French authorities seized the property, which boasts a cinema, hammam and marble and gold water taps, after convicting Obiang under a law targeting fortunes fraudulently amassed by foreign leaders. In 2021, France's top appeals court gave Obiang -- the eldest son of the long-standing president of Equatorial Guinea, Teodoro Obiang -- a three-year suspended sentence and 30 million euros in fines. France also confiscated assets, including the luxurious Avenue Foch building with an estimated value well above 100 million euros. In its latest complaint to the ICJ, dated July 3 but published by the court on Friday, Equatorial Guinea says French police entered the property last month and changed the locks on several of the doors. Equatorial Guinea called on the court to order France to give it "immediate, complete and unhindered access" to the building. Embassy or residence? The mansion was also at the centre of an earlier case filed by Equatorial Guinea in 2016 at the ICJ, which rules on disputes between UN member states. Equatorial Guinea argued the building served as the country's embassy in France and that France had broken the Vienna Convention, which safeguards diplomats from interference by host countries. But the UN court sided with France, which said the building was merely Teodorin Obiang's residence and served no diplomatic purpose. The ICJ upheld France's objections that Equatorial Guinea had only tried to designate it as such after the investigation began into Obiang, and that the country already had an embassy in Paris. A request for emergency orders -- provisional measures, in the court's jargon -- takes precedence over all other court business. The ICJ is currently wrestling with a busy caseload, including a high-profile case brought by South Africa against Israel alleging breaches of the UN Genocide Convention in Gaza. It is also expected to deliver a key ruling on countries' climate change obligations within months. While the ICJ is the top United Nations court, whose rulings are binding, it has no way of enforcing its decisions.


France 24
7 hours ago
- France 24
Should France's incel threat be treated like terrorism?
France 's counter-terrorism authority has launched its first investigation into the threat posed by the toxic misogyny of masculinist, incel culture. An 18-year-old identified as Timothy G. was charged and placed in pre-trial detention on Tuesday for being part of a 'terrorist criminal conspiracy' and making threats. He had two knives in his possession when he was arrested on June 28 in the Saint-Étienne region by the French domestic intelligence service, the DGSI, near the secondary school he attended. He had no police record and was enrolled in preparatory classes prior to attending university. Timothy G's lawyer, Maria Snitsar, said her client was 'a young person in distress' who 'has difficulty communicating with young people of his age [and] who is not at ease with himself'. She also said his detention was likely related to his activity online. 'I have the impression that being on social networks played a part in his being placed under investigation.' Snitsar says understanding her client's personality would be a key part of the inquiry. Determining the 'legal categorisation of the charges' will be possible only once the investigation has progressed further, she added. Not much precedent Very little information has been made public since Timothy G.'s first appearance before a custodial judge. However, the National Anti-Terrorism Prosecutor's Office confirmed that an investigation had been opened into the young man, who "claims to be a member of the 'incel' movement". Incels feel they have been rejected by women and have adopted aggressively misogynist views in response. According to a source close to the investigation, this is the first time an individual claiming to belong to this movement has been referred to the anti-terrorism prosecutor's office for related activities. Since the creation of the special anti-terror prosecutor's office in 2019, magistrates have mainly focused on the jihadist threat or potential attacks from far-right groups. Watch more France arrests teen for plotting attacks on women in landmark 'incel' case 'There isn't much case law on this type of issue,' notes Snitsar. But in recent years, the 'incel' branch of the masculinist movement has stepped up its hateful rhetoric, sometimes leading to acts of violence. In May 2024, a 26-year-old man was arrested near Bordeaux after a member of the public alerted authorities to his toxic online posts via the interior ministry's Pharos web portal, a system designed to curb illicit or harmful online content. He had posted a video praising 'incel' Elliot Rodger, the 22-year-old perpetrator of a 2014 mass killing in Isla Vista, California, in which seven people died, including Rodger. Because the terrorist intentions of the young Frenchman from Bordeaux were not established, the anti-terrorism prosecutor's office did not deal with the case. Dehumanisation of women Originating in North America in the 1990s, masculinist ideology has taken off, in part thanks to the internet. France's High Council for Equality between Women and Men (HCE) noted in its most recent report in January that "sexist and masculinist discourse has gained in visibility". "Women are more feminist and men more masculinist, especially young people," notes the council's director, Bérangère Couillard. According to a 2024 HCE survey, 52 percent of men between 25 and 34 felt that "men are being picked on". Among the various branches of masculinism popular on online forums, the "incels" are the most violent. A few hours before going on his killing spree, Rodger posted a long manifesto, justifying his actions by his hatred of women who had rejected him. 'I do not know why you girls aren't attracted to me,' he wrote 'But I will punish you all for it.' Mélissa Blais, professor of sociology at the Université du Québec in Outaouais (UQO) and a specialist in antifeminist movements, says there is something particularly violent about the movements seen today. "In 'incel' communities, there's something going on that's conducive to mass murder. Women are dehumanised, labelled as 'femoids' – seen as creatures to be fought. Dehumanisation is an important part of mass murder," Blais says. Canada has been one of the epicentres of masculinism since a 1989 massacre at Montreal 's École Polytechnique that targeted women. "There were two charges of terrorism brought in connection with masculinist attacks in Canada in 2023,' says Blais. One of the two men involved was a minor who had attempted to murder women in a massage parlour in 2020 in a case also inspired by the incel movement. In that case, an Ontario judge explained during the hearing that the suspect's behaviour did, indeed, meet the criteria to be considered terrorism under the Canadian Criminal Code. An evolving threat that is difficult to track Many countries are now weighing what incel activity meets the criteria to be legally categorised as terrorism. After a mass shooting in Plymouth in August 2021, UK counter-terrorism police initially felt the attack had not been motivated by "incel" propaganda. They backtracked in light of videos found on the suspect's computer. "The question is whether or not the authorities wish to treat the 'incel' phenomenon as a terrorist risk," notes the UK's independent terrorism laws auditor, Jonathan Hall. Hall says the definition of terrorism in the UK is broad enough to prosecute 'incel' violence under its statutes. The incel threat is difficult for the police to track. Although all are young men, they do not function as an established group or have a hierarchy, unlike a structured terrorist organisation. They also come from a wide variety of social backgrounds. Isolated kids exposed to toxic culture online 10:18 However, a 2021 report by the Paris public prosecutor's office cited by Mediapart noted the ideological proximity between the radical far right and masculinist groups. In its 2020 report on the terrorist threat, the European police agency Europol categorised 'incels' as a subset of 'far-right terrorism'. But Eviane Leidig, a researcher at the International Centre for Counter-Terrorism, an independent think tank, says this classification does not provide an effective understanding of the threat. 'Movements such as male supremacism and 'incels' can and should be considered as a distinct threat category, and not simply as a 'gateway' to other ideologies,' she says. The investigation into Timothy G. could provide the first clues as to how the French justice system will come to grips with the masculinist threat as well as the role of social networks in recruitment.


Mediapart
8 hours ago
- Mediapart
French police slash migrant 'taxi-boat' heading to UK
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