A Brazilian judge has ordered mobile-phone carriers to block access to WhatsApp for 72 hours throughout the country, the second such move against the messaging application in five months.
Monday's decision affects WhatsApp's 100 million-plus users in the country. The reason for the order is not known due to legal secrecy in an ongoing case in the court.
It is the second time since mid-December that WhatsApp has been the target of a blocking order.
The service was shut down for 48 hours on December 15 last year after Facebook failed to comply with an order, although another court interrupted that suspension shortly afterward.
He was jailed and subsequently freed.
Twitter user Acaua Tavares reacted with the Portuguese acronym "PQP", roughly equivalent to "WTF?" in English, an agency reported.
"WhatsApp blocked again, PQP! That's Brazil," he wrote.
Many commenters reacted with a single question: "Again?"
Officials blamed the company of continuously failing to share information on WhatsApp users for an investigation into drug trafficking and organised crime.
Mark Zuckerberg, the Facebook chief executive, was "stunned" by the "extreme decision".
In a statement, WhatsApp said the company is "disappointed at the decision" after doing the utmost to cooperate with Brazilian tribunals.
In 2013, Google too found itself under fire. The search engine giant's top Brazil executive was accused of breaking election laws when he refused to remove YouTube videos that were critical of a mayoral candidate in Mato Grosso do Sul state.
Reported non-cooperation from media companies is not that uncommon.
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