Pakistan slams Facebook for blocking radio bulletins on Kashmir

A smartphone user shows the Facebook application on his phone in the central Bosnian town of Zenica, in this photo illustration, May 2, 2013. (Reuters)
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Updated 31 December 2019
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Pakistan slams Facebook for blocking radio bulletins on Kashmir

  • Facebook said the broadcasts were against its community standards
  • Some of Radio Pakistan’s posts were also taken down by the social media giant

ISLAMABAD: The blocking of Radio Pakistan’s live news streaming on Kashmir by Facebook is a “violation of basic human rights,” Special Assistant to the Prime Minister for Information and Broadcasting Firdous Ashiq Awan said on Monday.

The Pakistan Broadcasting Corporation-owned (PBC) radio said its streaming has been blocked by the social media giant for “raising voice against continued atrocities, curfew and military lockdown in Indian occupied Kashmir.”

According to Facebook, the broadcasts were against its “community standards on dangerous individuals and organizations.”

While talking to reporters in Islamabad, Awan said Pakistan had earlier protested such moves and will do so again.

Facebook has not only blocked Radio Pakistan’s live streaming but also removed some of its posts.

The radio on its website shared screenshots of the posts that had been taken down. They covered the killing of Hizbul Mujahideen leaders Burhan Wani and Zakir Musa in Indian-administered Kashmir.

In September, the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) said that another social media giant, Twitter, had suspended over 300 accounts of Pakistani users over posts related to the ongoing crisis in disputed Kashmiri territory.

On Aug. 5, the Indian government scrapped Article 370 of the constitution, which granted the Indian-administered region of Kashmir a special autonomous status.


Islamabad court grants Imran Khan anticipatory bail in six cases

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Islamabad court grants Imran Khan anticipatory bail in six cases

  • Court says allegations fall within ‘further inquiry,’ finds little material beyond FIRs
  • Khan’s wife’s pre-arrest bail also confirmed in Toshakhana receipt forgery case

ISLAMABAD: An Islamabad court on Tuesday granted anticipatory bail to Pakistan’s jailed former prime minister Imran Khan in six separate cases ranging from alleged incitement and defamation to road blocking and violation of public order.

Judge Muhammad Afzal Majoka of the District and Sessions Court of Islamabad confirmed Khan’s interim pre-arrest bail in the cases, ordering him to furnish fresh bail bonds of Rs50,000 ($178) in each case.

Khan, 73, has been in prison since his arrest from his Lahore residence in August 2023. His wife, Bushra Imran, has also been detained and is being held at a high-security jail in Rawalpindi in connection with a graft case linked to Pakistan’s state gifts repository, commonly known as the Toshakhana.

In one of the cases related to protests that followed his brief detention on graft charges in 2023, the court noted there was no material linking him to acts attributed to co-accused.

“No material is available against petitioner regarding act of provoking which was witnessed by any witness,” the court order said.

The May 9, 2023, violence was carried out by people holding Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) flags who attacked and set ablaze government and military properties, triggering a sweeping crackdown against the party and the arrest of hundreds of its supporters.

In the six cases decided on Tuesday, the court repeatedly observed that there was “nothing on record” beyond the first information reports (FIRs) to substantiate allegations under various sections of the Pakistan Penal Code, including provisions related to abetment, public mischief and defamation.

In multiple orders, the judge ruled that the offenses fell within the “ambit of further inquiry” and confirmed the interim pre-arrest bail already granted to Khan.

The cases included allegations of making defamatory remarks against senior military officials in televised speeches, promoting unrest and violating restrictions on public gatherings.
In one of the cases, the court also confirmed the pre-arrest bail of his wife, Bushra Imran, in a separate Toshakhana-related case alleging forgery and use of fake purchase receipts for state gifts.

The former premier has been entangled in a slew of legal cases since his ouster from office in 2022, a frequent hazard for opposition figures in Pakistan. Khan and PTI say the cases are politically motivated and aimed at keeping him out of the political arena. The government denies the allegation.