India gives RIM until Aug 31 to yield on BlackBerry

NEW DELHI, (Reuters) – India, the world’s  fastest-growing telecom market, said it would hobble Research  In Motion’s BlackBerry smartphone unless the company  gives it the keys to decode encrypted email and messages by the  end of August.

The ultimatum was issued yesterday, hours after senior  government officials and state-run telecom operators met to  discuss how to access BlackBerry data.

Authorities fear the BlackBerry encryption could provide  cover for militants like those who used mobile phones to carry  out a series of deadly attacks in Mumbai two years ago.

India said if RIM didn’t meet its demands by Aug. 31 the  law would require phone operators to close the encrypted  BlackBerry Enterprise email and Messenger services carried over  their networks.

“RIM has assured us they will come with some solution. It  remains to be seen whether they address our security concerns,”  said a senior internal security official who declined to be  identified.

In response the company said its most secure Enterprise  system was sacrosanct but it was willing to open its consumer  services in line with requirements imposed on competitors.

“Driving RIM’s position is the fact that strong encryption  is a fundamental commercial requirement for any country to  attract and maintain international business,” the firm said.

India is not the only country concerned about RIM. Saudi  Arabia and other Arab countries say encrypted data sent via  BlackBerry could threaten national security, social mores or  both.

RIM shares closed 3.5 percent lower in Toronto and New  York, though the stock has not moved sharply down since the  security issue moved front and center early this month.

The stock has responded more to a new touchscreen device  designed to compete directly with Apple’s <AAPL.O> iPhone. The  new BlackBerry Torch, released yesterday, has failed to excite  analysts.

For RIM, any compromise could jeopardize its appeal to  business executives and politicians, like U.S. President Barack  Obama, who require air-tight communications. A deal in one  country will also embolden others to make tough demands.