This
file picture taken on July 09, 2017 shows employees at an e-commerce site's
offices in the Iranian capital Tehran
|
Iranians were joined by
two ministers Saturday in protesting after Apple removed popular apps from its
store, a move the American company says was made to comply with US sanctions.
AFP
report continues:
"Today,
respecting consumers' rights is a basic principle which Apple has not
followed," Information and Communication Technology Minister Mohammad
Javad Azari Jahromi tweeted, promising to "legally pursue" the case.
"IT
should be used for making human life better and comfortable not a tool for
discrimination between countries," he wrote.
Jahromi
said later Saturday on Instagram that he and Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad
Zarif were working together to address the issue.
The
hashtag #StopRemovingIranianApps has been trending on Iranian social media for
several days, after Apple removed at least 10 of the country's most popular
apps from its online store.
Those
now missing include Amazon-style shopping apps Digikala and Bamilo,
ride-hailing apps Snapp and Tap30, discount store Takhfifan and a brunch
delivery service called Delion.
"We
are unable to include your app on the App Store," a message sent to some
of those companies reportedly said.
"Under
the US sanctions regulations, the App Store cannot host, distribute, or do
business with apps or developers connected to certain US embargoed
countries."
The
United States lifted some sanctions on Iran, particularly in the aviation
sector, under a 2015 nuclear deal that saw Tehran limit its atomic programme.
But
American individuals and companies are still barred from doing any business
with Iranians because of much older and non-nuclear related sanctions on the
Islamic republic.
-
'On the right track' -
"There
are removed apps which did not have financial transactions, and due to
sanctions, some of them were registered in countries other than Iran too,"
Azari Jahromi tweeted.
"The
US does not sanction our weak points. They sanction our points of strength...
This should make us country officials support this field," he said in a
video published on the government's website.
"The
recent action by the US shows we are on the right track... because they fear us
and are removing these (apps)".
Some
Iranian apps in the same category of those that have been removed are still available
on the app store.
Iran's
youthful and well-connected population own some 40 million smart phones, six
million of them iPhones, the government-owned Iran Daily newspaper reported.
"Apple
has not provided any clear answers to our messages," the daily on Saturday
quoted Mehdi Taghizadeh, vice chairman at Delion, as saying.
More
than 4,500 Iranian netizens have signed an online petition urging Apple chief
executive Tim Cook "to recognize our rights as Apple customers".
"I've
always been an Apple user, but despite preferring them... I'm now going to
switch to Android," a user going by the name Xerexes wrote on Twitter.
"Technology
is best when it brings people together. We shouldn't limit or keep others from
using and developing it!" tweeted Ferial Govashiri, who used to work as a
personal assistant to former US president Barack Obama and is now at Netflix.
Owners of devices that run on Android can still download Iranian apps from the online store for Google, also an American company, but they are still unable to use paid apps in the country.
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