New Pakistani law related to Indian spy a ‘national security issue’ — minister

Former Indian navy officer Kulbhushan Sudhir Jadhav is seen on a screen during a news conference at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Islamabad on Dec. 25, 2017. (REUTERS/File)
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Updated 19 November 2021
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New Pakistani law related to Indian spy a ‘national security issue’ — minister

  • The country’s law minister Farogh Naseem says the government has thwarted ‘vicious designs’ of India by passing the legislation
  • Another government functionary informs the media Pakistani parliament has dropped chemical castration as punishment for serial rapists

ISLAMABAD: Federal Minister for Law and Justice Farogh Naseem said on Friday the government had passed a law related to Indian spy Kulbhushan Jadhav to fulfil the instructions of the International Court of Justice (ICJ), calling it a matter of national security.

A joint sitting of parliament on Wednesday passed the International Court of Justice (Review and Re-consideration) Bill, 2020, to provide the right of review and reconsideration in the Kulbhushan Jadhav case.

Jadhav is an Indian national who was arrested in March 2016 during a counter-intelligence operation in Pakistan.

According to Pakistani officials, he served as a commander in Indian Navy and was involved in subversive activities inside Pakistan.

In April 2017, he was sentenced to death by a Field General Court Martial in Pakistan, though the ICJ issued a stay order against the verdict in May.

The international court in a July 2019 judgment also directed Pakistan to conduct an “effective review and reconsideration including, if necessary, by enacting an appropriate legislation” in the case.

“This is a national security issue,” the law minister said while addressing a press conference here in Islamabad along with the parliamentary secretary for law and justice Maleeka Bokhari.

“We have cut off India’s hands through this legislation,” he said while maintaining it was not a person-specific law. “This is also for the times to come.”

The minister said India was planning to move a contempt notice against Pakistan in the ICJ to get sanctions imposed on the country through the United Nations Security Council if this legislation was not done.

“These vicious designs of India have now been thwarted,” he said, adding the Indian authorities went to the ICJ after a consular access to Jadhav was denied and the court gave an interim order against Pakistan.

“Indian prayer [to the ICJ] was that Kulbhushan should be acquitted,” he said. “The ICJ has rejected that prayer. To that extent, Pakistan has won this case.”

The minister criticized the opposition for railing against the legislation without considering Pakistan’s national interest. “Instead of appreciating this [law], you [the opposition] have turned it into a political tool,” he said.

Responding to the opposition’s statement that even the United States did not accept the ICJ decisions, the minister said Pakistan was a responsible state that followed its international obligations.

“We have to play on our own strengths,” he said. “We are not a banana republic.”

Meanwhile, the parliamentary secretary for law and justice clarified the government had removed a clause from a new criminal law passed on Wednesday through the joint sitting of parliament that allowed chemical castration as punishment for serial rapists.

“As per the new law, identity of a victim [in rape cases] has been protected as trial in the cases will be held in-camera,” she said, adding that special courts would be established to provide speedy justice in such cases.


Pakistan telecom regulator urges restraint on social media amid regional tensions

Updated 28 February 2026
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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.