Turkey still hopes Twitter will open office

This file picture dated on March 26, 2014 shows a picture representing a mugshot of the twitter bird seen on a smart phone with a Turkish flag in Istanbul. Turkey's government moved on April 3, 2014 to lift a controversial block on Twitter, a day after the country's top court had said the ban breached the right to free speech. AFP PHOTO / OZAN KOSE

ANKARA, Thursday

Turkey's government said on Thursday it still hopes Twitter will open an office in the country a day after the social networking site ruled out such plans.

In a statement following several days of talks with Twitter executives, Communication Minister Lutfi Elvan said Turkey had suggested that the company open a "liaison office" to improve coordination with the government.

"Twitter officials said they cannot make any immediate decision", he said, adding that the company would decide after "evaluations at its headquarters".

The site has had a tense relationship with the Turkish government in recent weeks, having been banned in March after it was used to spread corruption allegations against Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his allies.

Turkey has also criticised the San Francisco-based company for not opening a physical office in the country and paying domestic taxes.

Twitter has rejected charges of tax evasion, saying it already has a reseller in Turkey which pays applicable taxes.

A delegation led by Colin Crowell, Twitter's head of global public policy, travelled to Turkey this week in a bid to ease tensions.

But there was no agreement on opening an office in the country following meetings on the matter on Wednesday, Crowell said.

"Making greater investments here to grow our business has a relationship to whether or not we can count on the continuity of our service," he told AFP.

"And an investment climate in which our service has been shut off would give any company reservations about making an imminent investment".

On Thursday, the company's @policy feed: "Productive and informative meetings this week with government officials and NGOs in Ankara and Istanbul".

Erdogan's government had to unblock Twitter on April 3 after the country's top court ruled that the ban breached constitutional guarantees on free speech -- a ruling condemned by the prime minister, who sees the judiciary as packed with political opponents.

The government has accused Twitter of ignoring "hundreds of court orders" to remove links deemed illegal.

According to Elvan, Twitter officials said more than 200 items had been removed from the network over the last couple of weeks, and that "concrete progress" had been made in talks on Monday and Tuesday.

The ban on Twitter -- which has 12 million users in Turkey -- was part of a wider crackdown on the Internet ahead of local elections on March 30, in which Erdogan's Islamic-rooted AKP party scored a crushing victory in spite of the corruption allegations.

YouTube has been blocked in Turkey since March 27 despite two separate court orders to lift the ban.

The Internet bans have sparked outrage at home and abroad, raising questions about freedoms in Turkey, which has long sought to join the European Union.