Home Latest News Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan Threatens to Block Social Media

Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan Threatens to Block Social Media

by AFP

Aamir Qureshi—AFP

Pakistan’s interior minister backs court ruling to probe online ‘blasphemy.’

Interior minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan on Thursday threatened to block “all social media websites” that have blasphemous content hours after the Islamabad High Court ordered the government to investigate online “blasphemy.”

The issue came to the fore in January when five secular activists known for their outspoken views against religious extremism and the military were ‘disappeared’, presumed abducted by state agencies according to opposition parties and international rights groups. Four of the missing activists were later returned to their families weeks later, but not before they were tarnished by a virulent campaign to paint them enemies of Islam deserving execution.

On Thursday, a court ordered the government to open an investigation into online “blasphemy,” threatening to ban social media networks if they failed to censor content deemed insulting to Islam.

“We will go to any extent [including] permanently blocking all such social media websites if they refuse to cooperate,” the minister said in statement. No country can allow religious sentiments to be hurt or top state functionaries to be subjected to ridicule under what the minister described as “the pretext of freedom of expression.”

Judge Shaukat Aziz Siddiqui of the Islamabad High Court asked the government to form an investigative committee to report back next Monday over the issue, saying he could order social media sites to be blocked if offending content remained online. “The judge ordered the government to make a Joint Investigation Team with Muslim officials only to look into the blasphemy issue,” said advocate Tariq Asad, who represents the hardline Lal Masjid, which brought the case to court.

Rights groups say the label of blasphemer is liberally applied by religious conservatives in order to silence criticism of extremism. Even unproven allegations can be fatal. At least 65 people including lawyers, judges and activists have been murdered by vigilantes over blasphemy allegations since 1990, according to recent think tank report.

Pakistan previously banned Facebook for hosting allegedly blasphemous content for two weeks in 2010 while YouTube was unavailable from 2012 to 2016 over an amateur film about Islam’s Prophet that led to global riots. But Islamabad later came to agreements with major Internet firms to block within Pakistan material that violated its laws, generally once the companies had performed their own crosschecks.

Yasser Latif Hamdani, a lawyer who worked to get YouTube unblocked, said previous web censorship had also originated with court orders and the judge could succeed in implementing a fresh set of bans. “In this case you would have to apply to the Supreme Court to overrule it. Would they? He’s going to couch it in religious language… It could create a lot of problems if he does that,” he said.

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