Montenegrin officials blocked popular messaging services WhatsApp and Viber during the country's parliamentary election, a ban that drew allegations of interference from opposition politicians and concern from European election watchers today.
"Blocking such apps is unthinkable in any normal country," said opposition party leader Ranko Krivokapic, who previously monitored voting for the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe. "I have never heard of that happening anywhere ever in an election."
Authorities said they blocked Viber and WhatsApp for several hours during Sunday's inconclusive election because "unlawful marketing" was being spread through the networks.
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The outcome of the coalition negotiations will determine whether the state continues on its current course toward the West or turns back to traditional ally Russia.
The tense election was marked by the arrest of 20 people, including a former commander of Serbia's special police forces, suspected of planning politically motivated armed attacks against Djukanovic and his supporters.
Opposition leaders claim thousands of their supporters were rounded up by the police on election day.
While pointing out the need for further improvements, the OSCE vote-monitoring mission said in its report Monday the elections "were held in a competitive environment and fundamental freedoms were generally respected."
But the report also expressed concern over the blocking of Viber and WhatsApp. European parliamentarian Marietje Schaake said she was worried that such a draconian measure had apparently been deployed.
Schaake said in an email that such moves "must not be used to silence opposition or to limit the freedom of assembly or speech. It is crucial that the EU looks into the details of what took place, and ensures accountability."
Messages sent to WhatsApp and its owner Facebook Inc. weren't immediately returned. Viber, owned by Japanese tech company Rakuten Inc., didn't immediately provide comment on the reported outage.
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