Snapchat Permanently Bans President Donald Trump a Week After Twitter, Facebook and Instagram Imposed Ban

Snapchat has decided to permanently ban US President Donald Trump's account over his role in inciting the Capitol violence, a week after Twitter, Facebook and Instagram imposed bans on his personal account on their respective platforms.

Snapchat, Donald Trump (Photo Credits: Pixabay and FB)

Washington, January 14: Snapchat has decided to permanently ban US President Donald Trump's account over his role in inciting the Capitol violence, a week after Twitter, Facebook and Instagram imposed bans on his personal account on their respective platforms.

CNN quoted a Snapchat spokesperson as saying, "Last week we announced an indefinite suspension of President Trump's Snapchat account, and have been assessing what long term action is in the best interest of our Snapchat community." Twitter Shares Tumble After it Permanently Bans US President Donald Trump's Account.

The platform said it made the decision after the President's account repeatedly violated the company's community guidelines over the past several months.

"In the interest of public safety, and based on his attempts to spread misinformation, hate speech, and incite violence, which are clear violations of our guidelines, we have made the decision to permanently terminate his account," the spokesperson added. Vijaya Gadde, The Indian-American Lawyer at the Forefront of Donald Trump's Twitter Ban.

On January 7, Facebook announced its decision to suspend Trump's Facebook and Instagram accounts indefinitely.

On January 12, video-sharing app YouTube said it was barring new content from being posted on President Donald Trump's channel for at least a week over a violation of its policies.

Twitter had also banned personal account of Trump from its platform completely.

On January 6, a group of Donald Trump's loyalists stormed the US Capitol building, clashing with the police, damaging property, seizing the inauguration stage and occupying the rotunda.

The unrest took place after Trump urged his supporters to protest what he claims is a stolen presidential election. The outgoing President has since been blocked on all major social networks at least until after he is out of office.

Five people - four protesters and a police officer - were killed in the riots. The last time the Capitol was stormed was when British troops marched into Washington and set fire to the building in 1814.

(This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body)

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