Pakistan finalizing data protection bill after input from local, foreign stakeholders 

In this photograph taken on May 24, 2019, Pakistani youngsters work at their desks at the National Incubation Centre (NIC) in Lahore, Pakistan. (AFP/ File)
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Updated 13 January 2021
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Pakistan finalizing data protection bill after input from local, foreign stakeholders 

  • IT minister says has received feedback from tech giants like Amazon, Microsoft, Facebook and US Chamber of Commerce and EU
  • Government to set up Personal Data Protection Authority under new law, impose fine of up to Rs25 million for data breach 

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan government is reviewing a draft bill on personal data protection after receiving input from national and international technology and business stakeholders, Federal Minister for Information Technology and Telecommunication Syed Aminul Haque said on Tuesday. 
Data protection is being hotly debated in Pakistan, and around the world, after WhatsApp announced new privacy terms under which the company reserves the right to share user data, including location and phone number, with its parent Facebook Inc. and units such as Instagram and Messenger.
Privacy advocates have questioned the move citing Facebook’s track record in handling user data, with many suggesting users to migrate to platforms such as Telegram and Signal.
Pakistan prepared a draft of a personal data protection bill in 2018, but it is yet to be voted into law by parliament. 
“We aren’t in a hurry ... we wanted to make the personal data protection law by taking all local and foreign stakeholders into confidence,” Haque told Arab News in an interview. 
In June last year, the minister said, the IT ministry had received input on the draft law from all local and foreign stakeholders, including tech and business giants like Amazon, Microsoft, Facebook and LinkedIn, in addition to the US Chamber of Commerce and European Union.
“Point-by-point, section-wise review [of the draft law] is going on in the IT ministry and we will ultimately send it to the law ministry after finalizing it,” he said, adding that the draft law was accessible to the public to ensure transparency.
Haque said the government wanted to enact a law that “protected the data of common people from any misuse.” 
About WhatsApp’s new privacy policy, the minister said he had directed the country’s telecom regulator – the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority – to take up the issue with the management of the messaging giant and “ensure that no Pakistani user was going to face any problem due to the new policy.” 
As per the draft data protection law, the federal government will establish a Personal Data Protection Authority of Pakistan and impose a fine of up to 25 million rupees on anyone found guilty of a data breach. 
Digital rights activists and data experts say the government is delaying the enactment of the personal data protection law since it was not willing to bring data in its numerous public departments within the legal ambit.
“The state holds vast amounts of data and we have seen a lot of breaches of its databases … A lot of sensitive information related to citizens has been leaked and there is very little legal avenue available to citizens for legal recourse,” Usama Khilji, who works with digital rights group Bolo Bhi, told Arab News.

He said big corporations and marketing agencies also collected individual data to send unsolicited messages and advertisements, adding that the government should enact a data protection law to hold these companies and its own institutions accountable in case of a breach. 
“A very important factor that is missing from the draft law relates to government-held data,” Khilji said. “They don’t want any accountability of the data they hold, but they want to hold citizens and companies accountable.” 


 


Pakistan joins OIC, Islamic nations to reject Israel’s recognition of Somaliland

Updated 28 December 2025
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Pakistan joins OIC, Islamic nations to reject Israel’s recognition of Somaliland

  • Foreign ministers of 21 Islamic nations, OIC issue joint statement to condemn Israel’s move to recognize breakaway African region
  • Joint statement describes Israel’s move as a “grave violation of the principles of international law and the United Nations Charter“

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Sunday joined the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) and other Arab and Islamic nations in condemning Israel’s recognition of Somaliland, a breakaway African region, calling it a violation of international law and reaffirming its support for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Somalia. 

Israel this week announced it had recognized Somaliland — a self-declared region that broke away from Somalia in 1991 but has not previously been recognized by any United Nations member state — triggering condemnation from Somalia and criticism from regional bodies.

The joint statement shared by Pakistan’s foreign ministry on Sunday was endorsed by the foreign ministers of 20 other Muslim countries including Jordan, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Palestine, Qatar, Libya, Iran, Iraq, Türkiye, Yemen and others as well as the OIC. 

“Their unequivocal rejection of Israel’s recognition of the ‘Somaliland’ region of the Federal Republic of Somalia on 26 December 2025, given the serious repercussions of such unprecedented measure on peace and security in the Horn of Africa, the Red Sea, and its serious effects on international peace and security as a whole, which also reflects Israel’s full and blatant disregard to international law,” the joint statement said. 

The statement said Israel’s recognition constitutes a “grave violation of the principles of international law and the United Nations Charter,” pointing out that it reflects Tel Aviv’s expansionist agenda.

The Muslim states said they reject any measures that undermine Somalia’s unity, territorial integrity or sovereignty over its entire territory.

“The full rejection of any potential link between such a measure and any attempts to forcibly expel the Palestinian people out of their land, which is unequivocally rejected in any form as a matter of principle,” the statement said.

The statement was referencing international media reports earlier this year that said Israel and the US had reached out to East African states, including Somaliland, to take in Palestinians from Gaza.

Pakistan’s foreign office on Saturday issued a separate statement condemning Israel’s recognition of Somaliland. 

“Pakistan strongly condemns any attempts to undermine the sovereignty, unity, and territorial integrity of Somalia, and rejects, in this regard, the announcement made by Israel recognizing the independence of the so-called Somaliland region of the Federal Republic of Somalia,” the foreign office had said. 

Somalia’s government has said Israel’s recognition of Somaliland violates its sovereignty, while the African Union has opposed unilateral recognition of breakaway regions on the continent.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Friday his country had recognized Somaliland “in the spirit of the Abraham Accords,” referring to US-brokered deals that helped establish ties between Israel and Arab states.