Top Pakistani TikTok stars say will support government if it bans video app

Top Pakistani TikTok stars say will support government if it bans video app. (Photo courtesy: Social Media)
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Updated 30 July 2020
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Top Pakistani TikTok stars say will support government if it bans video app

  • Pakistani telecoms regulator has issued 'final warning' to TikTok over 'immoral, obscene and vulgar content'
  • TikTok stars support government regulations, say will move to Instagram and YouTube if platform banned 

KARACHI: Pakistani TikTok stars say they are not surprised by the government's plan to ban the video-sharing app, and some of them would even support it.

Last week, the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) said it had issued a "final warning" to the Chinese video-sharing platform over "immoral, obscene and vulgar content," after banning the Singaporean live-streaming app Bigo for the same reasons. The regulator requested that TikTok put in place a "comprehensive mechanism" to control obscenity.

While the announcement created an uproar on social media with many users and starlets voicing their opposition, TikTok influencers — with millions of followers — admit that some of the content circulated on the platform can indeed be inappropriate.  

"Every invention has its merits and demerits, or good or bad aspects, but in Pakistan, unfortunately, TikTok is mostly having a negative effect on our young generation," Haris Ali, who has four million TikTok followers told Arab News.

The 20-year-old KIPS College Lahore student, who gained fame for the funny videos he posts on his account @harrisali_01, told Arab News that much of other TikTok content is indeed inappropriate and many families would not want their children to watch it. 

It would not surprise him, he added, if the platform gets banned, in which case he would just shift to Instagram to post his videos there.

Ali said TikTok did not pay its popular users in Pakistan since the platform was not registered in the country, but mass following coupled with his dancing, acting and modeling skills, had made about 30 brands approach him to endorse their products.

Another top Pakistani TikTok user, Toqeer Abbas, aka Phoollu, whose @phoolllu account has 4.8 million followers, said for the past four months lots of negative material filled with abusive language had been uploaded to the platform.

Phoollu, a farmer from the small town of Dhok Shahani near Mandi Bahauddin, earns Rs600 a day working for a landlord. His TikTok career started when a friend uploaded a funny video he had made, which went viral, bringing him brand endorsement deals and gigs in videos of famous artists such as rapper Arbaaz Khan.

"I wish that PTA just blocked those accounts which are sharing indecent material instead of banning the app completely, but if the government decides to shut it down, I will support it,” said the 27-year-old father of six.  

He said if Tiktok were banned he would move to other channels such as YouTube where he already had many subscribers, hopeful that neither his fame nor earnings would be affected.

Artist Zhalay Sarhadi whose videos posted on the TikTok account @zhalaysarhadi get 1.5 million likes, said she is not in favor of banning the app, but believes that it is justifiable to introduce regulations to prevent young users from being exposed to disturbing content.

Herself not financially dependent on the platform, Sarhadi said banning it may cut the wings of many upcoming stars.

"Many notable talents have risen from this platform and are in the process of becoming real stars," she said, "We cannot take away from these genuinely talented individuals this medium and outlet for creativity."


Pakistan bans ex-PM Khan’s sister from meeting him for allegedly violating prison rules

Updated 04 December 2025
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Pakistan bans ex-PM Khan’s sister from meeting him for allegedly violating prison rules

  • Pakistan information minister accuses Khanum of discussing political matters with brother, instigating masses against state
  • Uzma Khanum met her brother, ex-PM Khan, on Tuesday in Adiala Jail where he remains incarcerated on slew of charges

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Information Minister Attaullah Tarar announced on Thursday that the government will not allow former prime minister Imran Khan’s sister to meet him anymore, accusing her of violating prison rules by indulging in political discussions during her visits. 

Khan’s sisters, Uzma Khanum and Aleema Khanum, met him at the Adiala Prison on Tuesday after being allowed by the authorities to do so. The former prime minister’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party and family members accused authorities of illegally denying them permission to visit the incarcerated leader in jail. 

Khan’s sisters had spoken to local and international media outlets last month, voicing concern over his safety as rumors of his death started doing the rounds on social media. However, Khanum quashed the rumors on Tuesday when she said her brother was “in good health” after meeting him.

Speaking to reporters at a news conference, Tarar accused Khanum and the former premier’s other sisters of attempting to create a “law and order situation” outside Adiala Prison in Rawalpindi. He alleged Khanum had partaken in political discussions with her brother, which was in violation of prison rules. 

“As per the rules, there is no room for political discussions, and it has been reported that political talk did take place, hence Uzma Khanum’s meetings have been banned from today,” Tarar said. 

The minister said Khan’s meetings with his sisters took place in the presence of the jail superintendent, alleging that discussions revolved around instigating the masses and on political matters. 

“Based on these violations, under any circumstances, the rules and code of conduct do not allow meetings to take place,” the minister said. “You were given a chance. Whoever violated [the rules] their meetings have been banned.”

This is what one gets for peacefully protesting. No criticism of the govt or The Army chief otherwise we can’t meet imran khan

Khan’s aide, Syed Zulfiqar Bukhari, criticized the information minister’s announcement. 

“This is what one gets for peacefully protesting,” Bukhari said in a text message shared with media. “No criticism of the govt or the army chief otherwise we can’t meet Imran Khan.”

Khan, who has been jailed on a slew of charges since August 2023, denies any wrongdoing and says cases against him are politically motivated to keep him and his party away from power. Pakistan’s government rejects the PTI’s claims he is being denied basic human rights in prison. 

Ousted from the prime minister’s office via a parliamentary vote in April 2022, Khan and his party have long campaigned against the military and government. He has accused the generals of ousting him together with his rivals. Khan’s opponents deny this, while the military says it does not meddle in politics.