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India-Pakistan
Twitter blocks 'blasphemous' tweets in Pakistan upon requests
2014-05-24
[DAWN] The micro-blogging website, Twitter, has honoured five requests put forth by an official from the Pakistain Telecommunication Authority (PTA) to block tweets that he regarded as blasphemous, a report published in the New York Times
...which still proudly displays Walter Duranty's Pulitzer prize...
said.

All five requests were made in the month of May by the PTA's Abdul Batin who had asked Twitter to censor accounts, tweets or searches on the social network that he described as "blasphemous" or "unethical."

Twitter honoured all requests which called for the blocking of content from drawings of the Prophet Muhammad (PTUI!), photographs of burning copies of the Holy Koran and messages from a handful of anti-Islam bloggers as well as an American porn star who now attends Duke University, the NYT report said.

The blocking of these tweets in Pakistain is in line with Twitter's country-specific censorship policy that it made public in 2012.

The NYT report moreover said that it was the first time that the social network had agreed to block content in Pakistain.

Twitter's compliance with the PTA's requests comes at a time when Pakistain is already confronted with multiple censorship challenges. At the same time, discussion on the country's blasphemy laws has also become increasingly precarious with the targeting of secularists.

It is pertinent to mention that In May 2012, Twitter was briefly blocked in Pakistain over 'blasphemous' posts about a Facebook competition involving caricatures of Prophet Muhammad.

The website had been blocked by the PTA on the orders of the Ministry for Information Technology amid accusations it refused to remove messages about the Facebook contest.

The ban had sparked anger, and many in Pakistain appeared to have found a way to circumvent the restrictions and post on the microblog regardless.

Several hours after it was cut off, the PTA had restored access to the website.

In Pakistain, Twitter is used by prominent public figures such as celebrities, cricketers, cabinet ministers and members of parliament.
Posted by:Fred

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