Khurram Dastgir Khan welcomes Arab News to Islamabad in keynote speech

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Pakistan's Minister of Defense, Khurram Dastgir Khan, left, greeting the UAE ambassador to Pakistan, during the launch of the Arab News Pakistan edition in Islamabad, Thursday, Feb. 8, 2018. (AN photo)
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Arab News Editor in Chief, Faisal J. Abbas, center, with Pakistan’s Minister of Defense Khurram Dastgir Khan, right, during the launch of the Arab News Pakistan edition in Islamabad, Thursday, Feb. 8, 2018. (AN photo)
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Arab News Editor in Chief, Faisal J. Abbas, speaks during the launch of the Arab News Pakistan edition in Islamabad, Thursday, Feb. 8, 2018. (AN photo)
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Arab News Southeast Asia bureau chief, Baker Atyani, speaks during the launch of the Arab News Pakistan edition in Islamabad, Thursday, Feb. 8, 2018. (AN photo)
Updated 09 February 2018
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Khurram Dastgir Khan welcomes Arab News to Islamabad in keynote speech

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani Defense Minister Khurram Dastgir Khan on Thursday said he was “delighted” at the launch of the Pakistan edition of Arab News.
It is “a very welcome sign” of Pakistan’s “rebirth” over the last few years, he said at the launch ceremony at the Marriott Hotel in Islamabad.
It is the “rebirth of our freedom as a nation that deserves to live in peace” after a “terrible ordeal of violent extremism that we faced a few years ago,” he added. 
“There was a double jeopardy because this violent extremism was coupled with crippling energy shortages that practically brought Pakistan to a halt — a bloody and dark halt,” he said.
“Many industrialized countries issued some very crippling adviseries against travel to Pakistan, and many foreign airlines stopped flying to Pakistan. We were slowly, it seemed, cut off from the rest of the world,” Khan added.
“I see the launch of the Pakistan edition of Arab News as a sign of a more connected, peaceful, normal Pakistan,” he said.
“It has been a reemergence of Pakistan… after a dark period, for which the people of Pakistan have to be given the principal credit for their tremendous, and to me mind-boggling, resilience in the face of such odds,” he added.
The killing of 142 students at the Army Public School in Peshawar in December 2014 “is only one of the incidents that brought home to us the challenge that we face,” he said. 
“In my current responsibility as minister of defense, I had the opportunity two days ago to meet some of the soldiers who were wounded in the Swat suicide bombing over the weekend… Their bodies were shattered… by that explosion (but) none of them spoke of pain or cried in pain. They were very stoic, very gallant,” Khan added.
“I kept imagining that they are just a dozen of nearly 20,000 soldiers who had been similarly mutilated and harmed over the past decade or so, not to mention the nearly 50,000 civilians who have been maimed and tortured,” he said.
“This peace we currently have has come at a great cost… therefore it is our duty as Pakistanis to preserve this peace so that our future generations do not have to go through that ordeal that we have just gone through. Inshallah (God willing) Pakistan is consolidating in many ways,” he added.
“Its stumbling democracy … seems to have stabilized. The economy has stabilized, although there is of course still a mountain to climb on that front to bring prosperity to the people,” he said.
“I am just delighted that the people and Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, who have been a steadfast partner of Pakistan throughout our existence, in a new and very interesting and exciting way through Arab News have decided to become part of this… rebirth of Pakistan,” Khan added.
“My congratulations to the Pakistan team that is launching this new edition. I commend the editors… of Arab News and its owners for taking this far-sighted decision to become part of the success story of Pakistan. Congratulations and I wish you success.”

For more photos from the event, click here.


Pakistan telecom regulator urges restraint on social media amid regional tensions

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Pakistan telecom regulator urges restraint on social media amid regional tensions

  • PTA warns against sharing unverified content, says legal action may follow ‘fake news’
  • Advisory comes as Pakistan strikes targets in Afghanistan and Iran faces US, Israeli attacks

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s telecom regulator on Saturday urged citizens to avoid sharing “unverified or inflammatory” content online, warning that legal action could be taken against those spreading misinformation amid what it described as a “sensitive national situation.”

The advisory from the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) comes as Islamabad says it is targeting militant positions inside Afghanistan following a recent flareup between the two neighbors, while Iran is under attack by the United States and Israel in an escalating regional conflict that has heightened security concerns across South and West Asia.

“In view of the prevailing sensitive national situation, Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) urges all citizens to be responsible while using social media and digital platforms,” the regulator said in a statement posted on X.

The PTA advised citizens “not to share, disseminate, forward, or upload any unverified, inflammatory, or misleading information/content that may directly or indirectly harm the national interest, public order, or state institutions.”

It said people should instead rely on authentic information based on official sources and refrain from spreading rumors and “fake news.”

“Sharing any fake news/information is liable to legal action in accordance with applicable laws,” the authority said, calling on citizens to act with “caution, maturity, and a strong sense of national responsibility” to help maintain stability and public confidence.

Pakistan in recent years has witnessed increasingly stringent implementation of the Prevention of Electronic Crimes Act (PECA), a cybercrime law that has drawn criticism from rights groups, with journalists and activists arrested and prosecuted under its provisions.