Naqvi urges new laws for online speech
Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi said Tuesday the country needed better laws to regulate internet free speech, as disruption of social media platform X stretched into its fifth week.
Islamabad has declined to clearly say whether it is behind nationwide restrictions to the platform, formerly known as Twitter, which have left it rarely accessible since February 17.
Pakistan's polls earlier that month were marred by allegations of rigging, and the outages began after a senior government official made a public admission of vote tampering.
Speaking to the media in Lahore alongside PPP leader Ali Haider Gilani, the security czar gave an example of how the US House passed a bill to ban TikTok.
“In a country like the US where such things (ban) are taking place, we will also need to review our law and make sure that there is ‘no ban’ on the freedom of expression,” Naqvi added.
The interior minister emphasised that the misuse of social media which results in levelling unfounded allegations “needs to be kept in check”.
"We need to make better laws," the minister said when asked whether his ministry was responsible for the X shutdown.
"Expression is fine, but making false allegations against people is wrong -- it's happening and needs to be fixed."
Read also: IHC issues notices to ministry, PTA over suspension of social media platform X
"We must reassess our own laws and look into what is being misused," he told the media.
X, Facebook, Instagram and TikTok were key planks in the election campaigning of jailed ex-prime minister and popular opposition leader Imran Khan.
Meanwhile, Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) Major General (retd) Hafeezur Rehman said that the authority had not received any written order from the interior ministry regarding the closure of X. “There is just confusion for now,” he told a local website.
While answering a question regarding Information Minister Attaullah Tarar’s acknowledgement of the closure, Rehman stated that Tarar should be questioned for any information on X.
The PTA chairman said he would raise the issue of the closure of social media platform X with the interior ministry, the website reported. “Either the matter should be cleared or someone should take responsibility for it. The closure of social media forums is always directed by the interior ministry.”
When asked whether any instruction was issued regarding shutting down X in the country, the PTA chairman stated that there is just confusion for now. “I have asked my staff that my internet is working even though I do not have a VPN,” he said, referring to a virtual private network.
The former cricket star was barred from running and his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party was subject to a sweeping crackdown of arrests and censorship ahead of February 8 polls.
Read: Govt won’t let social media become ‘propaganda’ tools
Most of their campaigning moved online, where it was shut down by numerous social media blackouts which Islamabad blamed on technical glitches.
Rigging claims were also fuelled by a nationwide mobile internet shutdown on polling day, which the caretaker government said was required for security reasons after twin bombings killed 28 a day earlier.
X remained unavailable to AFP reporters in Islamabad, Peshawar and Lahore on Tuesday afternoon -- but the site has been momentarily accessible at times over the past five weeks.
"The problem is there is no transparency by the government," said Sadaf Khan, an analyst for Pakistani campaign group Media Matters for Democracy.
"Twitter is being banned specifically because it has emerged as a platform where political disclosure takes place," she told AFP.
Information minister Attaullah Tarar has given mixed signals over disruption, telling one local media outlet it "is working" and another that it was "already banned" when the new government came to power.
Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif -- who secured the office through a shaky coalition after Khan's candidates defied expectations to secure more seats than any other party -- has frequently published statements on X.
On Monday, he used the platform to congratulate Russian President Vladimir Putin for his re-election in a poll slammed by independent observers and the West as the most corrupt in post-Soviet history.
(With input from AFP)