TikTok returns to Albania after government-imposed ban

TikTok torna in Albania dopo il divieto imposto dal governo


The TikTok app icon on a smartphone in this illustration taken October 27, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration (Reuters)

By Fatos Bytyci and Florion Goga

TIRANA, Feb 27 (Reuters) - Social media platform TikTok is back in Albania after a year-long ban expired this month, in a case illustrating the complexity of imposing bans in a politically fragmented region and sparking questions over online safety and censorship.

The ban, imposed last year and ostensibly linked to the death of a teenage boy after bullying online, saw Chinese-owned short video platform TikTok banned for all users. The government says TikTok has now tightened safety measures sufficiently.

But the case is complex in a country hit by unrest over political corruption and where the ruling party is in an unprecedented fourth term in power. Opposition parties accuse the government of trying to silence them by banning the platform weeks before parliamentary elections last year.

The government of Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama told Reuters that TikTok had taken steps to address issues that it had raised and said the ban helped put pressure on the platform.

“With its correct behavior toward our concerns, TikTok confirmed to us the expression that ‘the devil is not as black as it seems’,” the government said in a statement, adding it had put in place “important filters for security and language”.

TikTok declined to comment. The government said there was “no connection” between the TikTok ban and election interference and that the “only goal” had been to protect children.

ONLINE SAFETY OR CENSORSHIP?

TikTok was suspended in Albania after a 14-year-old boy was stabbed to death by a fellow pupil, a crime that local media reports said occurred after the two had clashed online. At the time TikTok said the clash did not originate on their platform.

It also came weeks before a crunch parliamentary election.

“The shutdown of TikTok was certainly a move by the Rama government to manipulate public opinion,” said Edona Haklaj from the small party Shqiperia Behet that has been holding daily protests in front of Rama’s office since early December. She did not give any concrete proof for her assertion.

Albania has been marred in recent months by violent protests between police and the main opposition Democratic Party, demanding the resignation of the government after deputy PM Belinda Balluku was indicted for manipulating public tenders.

Late on Thursday Rama, in power since 2013, fired Balluku, though the opposition has pledged to still hold protests on Saturday. Activists worry the TikTok ban - even if lifted - could be used to justify further blocks amid rising tensions.

“This will create a dangerous precedent,” said Isa Myzyraj, the president of the Association of the Albanian Journalists. “Any government could exploit this precedent to block other social networks or even impose a total internet shutdown.”

Brenton Benja, founder of Geek Room Albania who tracked the ban, cautioned that the measure had had limited impact as people used VPNs to skirt controls - a signal of the wider challenge of imposing social media bans on increasingly tech-savvy users.

The government also acknowledged in its statement that a full ban had proved “impossible” because of technological hurdles.

“The 1.7 million Albanians we knew were using TikTok at the time it was closed continued to use it throughout the year by turning to alternative methods such as VPNs,” Benja said.

(Reporting by Fatos Bytyci and Florion Goga; Additional reporting by Supantha Mukherjee; Editing by Ivana Sekularac, Adam Jourdan and Hugh Lawson)

Scrivici per correzioni o suggerimenti: posta@internazionale.it

Abbonati a Internazionale per leggere l’articolo.
Gli abbonati hanno accesso a tutti gli articoli, i video e i reportage pubblicati sul sito.