Next week, Twitter will offer a “wide amnesty” to suspended accounts, according to Elon Musk.
This occurred after he began a poll on Wednesday asking Twitter users if accounts that “had not broken the law or engaged in flagrant spam” should be reinstated.
Mr. Musk has already resurrected several accounts, including that of former U.S. president Donald Trump.
Last month, the world’s richest man purchased Twitter for $44 billion (£36,3 billion).
72.4% of the over 3.1 million Twitter users who replied to Mr. Musk’s poll voted “Yes.”
“The public has spoken. Amnesty begins next week, “Later, Mr. Musk, who has 118.7 million Twitter followers, said.
He also employed the Latin phrase “the voice of the people is the voice of God.”
Mr. Musk did not provide specifics regarding the amnesty procedure.
On Saturday, he resurrected Donald Trump’s account after conducting a poll in which people narrowly supported the action.
However, the previous president of the United States has stated, “I see no justification for it.”
He has declared his intention to run for the presidency again in 2024.
After Trump supporters stormed the US Capitol in 2021, his Twitter account was suspended 2021 because it posed a risk of encouraging violence.
Mr. Musk has also resurrected the Twitter accounts of Ye (formerly Kanye West) and Andrew Tate.
The multibillionaire stated, however, that Alex Jones would not be permitted to return to Twitter.
Jones was ordered to pay $1.44 billion in damages for falsely and repeatedly stating that the 2012 school shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School, in which 20 children and six adults were slain, was a fake.
Mr. Musk said that his child had died and that he “had no mercy” for those who would “exploit the deaths of children for profit, politics, or notoriety.
Previously, he stated that no decision would be made about banned accounts until a moderation board was appointed.
Mr. Musk concluded his $44 billion acquisition of Twitter on October 28 after months of negotiation.
As a result of an email stating that those who remained would be obliged to work long hours and “hardcore” work, he has subsequently laid off half of the firm’s 7,500-person workforce, and it is thought that hundreds more employees have gone.