U.S. appeals court rejects gov't motion to stay preliminary injunction on WeChat ban

Source: Xinhua| 2020-10-27 13:30:26|Editor: huaxia

Bob Grubba, president and CEO of Broadway Limited Imports, contacts his Chinese partners via WeChat in his office in Ormond Beach of Florida, the United States, June 6, 2019. (Xinhua/Zou Guangping)

According to judges for the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, the government had not demonstrated that it would "suffer an imminent, irreparable injury during the pendency of this appeal, which is being expedited."

SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 26 (Xinhua) -- A U.S. appeals court on Monday rejected a Justice Department's appeal to immediately ban WeChat, a messaging, social media and mobile payment app owned by Chinese company Tencent, in the country.

According to judges for the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, the government had not demonstrated that it would "suffer an imminent, irreparable injury during the pendency of this appeal, which is being expedited."

On Friday, Magistrate Judge Laurel Beeler from the District Court for the Northern District of California also denied the government's motion to stay the preliminary injunction on banning WeChat.

She ruled that the government's additional evidence did not alter the court's previous holding that U.S.-based users of WeChat are entitled to a preliminary injunction.

A tablet screenshot taken on Sept. 20, 2020 in San Francisco, the United States, shows the start page of WeChat, a Chinese messaging, social-media and mobile-payment app. (Xinhua/Wu Xiaoling)

On Sept. 20, she temporarily halted U.S. President Donald Trump's executive order to ban WeChat by issuing an order to grant the motion for a preliminary injunction, which determined the restrictions placed on WeChat could violate the Constitutional Amendment rights of its users in the United States.

The U.S. Commerce Department issued the Identification of Prohibited Transactions on Sept. 18.

"The result is that consumers in the U.S. cannot download or update the WeChat app, use it to send or receive money, and -- because U.S. support for the app by data hosting and content caching will be eliminated -- the app, while perhaps technically available to existing U.S. users, likely will be useless to them," Beeler wrote in her order.

The government then turned to the appeals court early this month, appealing to alter Beeler's ruling.

A tablet screenshot taken on Sept. 20, 2020 shows the download page of WeChat, a Chinese messaging, social-media and mobile-payment app, on a U.S. App store. (Xinhua/Wu Xiaoling)

On Aug. 6, Trump issued an executive order banning U.S. transactions via WeChat, which would take effect on the late night of Sept. 20.

To fight for the legal rights of all WeChat users in the country, the U.S. WeChat Users Alliance (USWUA) sued the Trump administration for the ban. The lawsuit opened in court on Sept. 17.

The plaintiffs, including USWUA and other app users, argued that WeChat is irreplaceable for its users in the United States.

KEY WORDS:
EXPLORE XINHUANET
010020070750000000000000011102121394703621