Hamza Ali Abbasi's Facebook account suspended for three days
A couple of days ago Facebook removed the actor's post praising Burhan Wani
Days after Hamza Ali Abbasi's post praising Burhan Wani was removed by Facebook, the social media giant has now banned the actor's personal account for three days.
Hamza took to Twitter to share the news.
"Banned again for 3 days. Now FB will tell us who is and isn't a terrorist," tweeted Hamza.
Facebook removes Hamza Ali Abbasi's post praising Burhan Wani
Earlier on Tuesday, Hamza's account was temporarily deactivated when he supported Wani saying the assassinated leader was not an ISI agent but a Kashmiri who had joined the rebellion after his brother was killed by Indian army.
Following threats, PEMRA puts a lid on Hamza Ali Abbasi's Ramazan transmission
“My FB account deactivated for talking about Kashmir,” claimed Hamza in a Tweet, although his Facebook account was accessible.
Hamza Ali Abbasi goes where no one dares to on national tv
This is not the first time that Hamza's post had been removed. Earlier in January, 2015, Facebook removed his post on the Paris attack.
However, in a rare apology, the website’s founder, Mark Zuckerberg, admitted his team may had have made a mistake, and hence apologised.
Hamza took to Twitter to share the news.
"Banned again for 3 days. Now FB will tell us who is and isn't a terrorist," tweeted Hamza.
Facebook removes Hamza Ali Abbasi's post praising Burhan Wani
Earlier on Tuesday, Hamza's account was temporarily deactivated when he supported Wani saying the assassinated leader was not an ISI agent but a Kashmiri who had joined the rebellion after his brother was killed by Indian army.
Following threats, PEMRA puts a lid on Hamza Ali Abbasi's Ramazan transmission
“My FB account deactivated for talking about Kashmir,” claimed Hamza in a Tweet, although his Facebook account was accessible.
Hamza Ali Abbasi goes where no one dares to on national tv
This is not the first time that Hamza's post had been removed. Earlier in January, 2015, Facebook removed his post on the Paris attack.
However, in a rare apology, the website’s founder, Mark Zuckerberg, admitted his team may had have made a mistake, and hence apologised.