This appears to be something of a sledgehammer to crack a cyber walnut, despite the fact that Pakistan does not currently have any laws that target cybercrime, the single ordinance in this respect having expired in 2008. Those curbs already in place — the blocking of YouTube among others — stem more from a loosely defined sense of moral outrage by one sector of the population and not from the breaking of any law. No prosecutions are likely to stem from the ongoing interdiction, and the blocking of sites is based on a purely subjective set of perceptions rather than a defacto breach of the law.
Introducing a new set of legislation that targets undoubted irritants on the one hand appears laudable, but on the other is the thin end of the wedge. Heavyweight legislation to limit what most view as a minor irritant will bring a few hundred into the prosecutorial net. Enforcement of the proposed legislation will require substantial human and infrastructure development. By all means limit criminality, but do not hide significant infringements of civil liberties with the fig-leaf of supposedly populist legislation.
Published in The Express Tribune, February 25th, 2014.
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I am all for freedom of speech and activity which cause no bodily harm and/ or monetary loss to others. This proposed law is draconian and sould not be pursued.