Google, the parent company of YouTube, had rejected requests from the previous government to remove the objectionable material. Still, this should not discourage the new government from pursuing the matter with perseverance and talking to the internet giant for a reversal of its decision. At the same time, the government should consider that a blanket ban on the website is in no one’s interest. It only goes to hurt the users — whether they accessed the website for entertainment, scholastic purposes or research. The example of Bangladesh can be thrown in for good measure, which recently announced lifting of a similar ban.
The new administration must find ways to undo the ban. At any rate, censorship-dodgers would always find ways to skirt regulatory controls. That, indeed, is the case with smart, internet-savvy young people, who are known to be accessing the website anyway. This alone shows that the people consider the ban to be unjustified and, therefore, the government, being the representative of the people, must lift the ban.
Published in The Express Tribune, June 11th, 2013.
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COMMENTS (9)
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all users get access to Youtube via hotspot shield or proxy changers etc. really it proves that people are thinking the ban is not justice , but Pakistan govt should request Google to remove the video anti Islamic, govt of Pakistan can also sign an agreement with America, Google and Youtube for future
Why not youtube.com.pk or youtube.pk, which may still remain with YouTube management, but the contents are those which are in compliance with the guidelines as per aspirations of the Government of Pakistan. It would be a go-between strategy without changing positions!
@whitesky: Then why didn't the previous left wingers lifted the ban? This is something else my friend that you cannot understand.
What led the editorial desk to think that the present government of right wing parties can dare i repeat dare to raise the matter of lifting the ban on you tube when the said video is still there
It's not only about YouTube, it's about how ruthlessly our governments butcher the web. I come across tens of websites everyday, blocked for no apparent reason. The government's hold over the internet is dangerous. They can manipulate the only neutral media platform available in Pakistan. For example, for a few months of the PPP-led government, Dr. Allama Tahir ul-Qadri's Wikipedia page was very conveniently inaccessible in Pakistan. This goes to show how the IT ministry can use this horrendous tool of Internet censorship for the ruling party's own interests. We must stand up against unjustified bans on YouTube and other websites alike. What the first comment said about our nation is fairly true, but such opinions of the public can only be changed through mass media, YouTube included. The nation celebrating Salman Taseer's murder does not mean you push them back to the dark ages. It means you address them, educate them. A free and open world, depends on a free and open web.
I hate the situation when someone tell me that I don't know what is wrong and what is right for me. Banning any information flow in this 21st century is like hiding the sun with bare hands. The sooner we learn it , the better we are.
How do you assume hat the 'people' want the ban reversed? Is it the same people who garlanded Mumtaz Qadri? Without squarely facing the issue of blasphemy, this conundrum cannot be resolved.
You cannot say it is Okay to burn a Christian colony and lock up Ahmadis for simply publishing their literature is acceptable in the name of blasphemy but being deprived of youtube is unacceptable.