Bring back bloggers if there is proof against them, IHC orders FIA

Court orders interior ministry to take action against NGOs spreading blasphemy, pornography

PHOTO: EXPRESS/FILE

ISLAMABAD:
The Islamabad High Court (IHC) has directed the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) to bring back the bloggers – who went missing in January and left Pakistan after their ‘recovery’– and to initiate a legal action against them if there is any evidence about their committing blasphemy on social media.

In its three-page summary judgment on a case against blasphemous content on social media sites, the IHC on Friday also directed the FIA to continue its investigation into the alleged online blasphemy on merit and to incorporate any fresh complaint.

Five bloggers – Salman Haider, Waqas Goraya and Asim Saeed, Ahmed Raza Naseer and Samar Abbas – had gone missing in the first and second week of January from different parts of the country.

FIA arrests three for posting blasphemous content on social media

Shortly after their disappearances, blasphemy allegations against them had appeared on social media and in a complaint to police. A social media campaign – painting the missing bloggers as blasphemers – triggered a flood of threats despite denials from their families.

Later a rights campaigner, Jibran Nasir, also approached the Supreme Court of Pakistan to intervene in the matter, claiming that there was no publicly available evidence if any of these missing activists were administering a webpage ‘Bhensa’ which is often accused of publishing blasphemous content.

One of the bloggers, Waqas Goraya, had also denied involvement in committing any blasphemy in an interview published after ‘his release’.

On Friday, the IHC judge Justice Shaukat Aziz Siddiqui also asked the Ministry of Interior’s (MoI) to identify the NGOs operating in Pakistan with an agenda to spread blasphemy and pornography, and initiate action against them.


The judge asked the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) to evolve a comprehensive mechanism to identify social media pages and websites containing blasphemous content.

Facebook should be banned until blasphemous content removed: IHC

The PTA chairman was also directed to evolve a mechanism to create awareness of blasphemy and pornography with penal consequences under the law.

The IHC directed the government to remove all blasphemous contents from social media sites and to identify the people involved in posting such content.  In this regard, it ordered the MoI’s secretary to constitute a panel to carry out a campaign for removing such content and to identify the culprits.

The court also directed the Attorney General of Pakistan Ashtar Ausaf Ali to take steps within a month to incorporate prevention of blasphemy and pornography in the Prevention of Electronic Crimes Act 2016 as well as to address the issue of penal consequences of false accusation of blasphemy.

He also directed the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) to evolve a comprehensive mechanism to identify social media pages and websites containing blasphemous content.

During the hearing, Justice Siddiqui remarked that he would offer “two rakat namaz today to thank God for saving Pakistan from a big disaster”.

The AGP told the court that he had been out of the country and that he had seen the files only a day earlier. The court was informed that the summary for amendment in the FIA Act had been sent to the prime minister. The detailed judgment of the case will be issued later.
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