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Pakistan's e-space abuzz after Facebook, Twitter ban

Pakistanis are hopping mad following the ban on social networking sites Facebook and Twitter and the blocking of Blackberry services in the wake of a controversy over a contest featuring blasphemous caricatures of Prophet Mohammed.

Updated on: May 21, 2010 10:59 PM IST
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Pakistanis are hopping mad following the ban on social networking sites Facebook and Twitter and the blocking of Blackberry services in the wake of a controversy over a contest featuring blasphemous caricatures of Prophet Mohammed.

HT Image
HT Image

Raza Rumi, the editor of a popular ezine, described the banning of Blackberry services as "absolute madness".

The crackdown on websites with "blasphemous" and "sacrilegious" content began after the Lahore High Court directed authorities to block Facebook on Wednesday.

"The zealots want us to go back to the stone age. These decisions should be reversed at once. There are other ways of dealing with this issue and not by an absolute ban of connectivity in the 21st century. In any case, it is not easy to 'ban' stuff in this day and age.

"Many Internet users have found other ways of bypassing this embargo," Rumi wrote on his ezine.

Rumi cross-posted a message by blogger Ali Shah, who wrote: "They have banned the entire Facebook domain in Pakistan (and) barred Blackberry services for one ignorant rant? They have burnt the entire village for one bad guy and we must stand up to it".

Rumi also posted a sarcastic poem that propagated the banning of Facebook, email, Twitter, books, paper, pen and even "thinking".

"As Muslims, let's be outraged and have shut down or at least boycott the site that was sacrilegious... then close or at least boycott the pen/then close or at least boycott speech/then close or at least boycott gesture/then close or at least boycott thinking," said the poem.

Adil Najam, editor of another popular ezine, said he was saddened to write a post on the issue.

"I hope that Facebook administration will remove the page. Not because of any 'banning' movement and not because of the Lahore High Court. Just because the page and the idea behind the page is inflammatory and offensive," Najam wrote.

"Regardless of what your belief or religion might be, to throw out offensive and hateful vitriolic for the simple and primary purpose of hurting someone else's feelings - when you know that (a) those feelings will be hurt and (b) when hurting those feelings is really the only purpose of doing what you are doing - is inhuman, cruel, and clearly offensive," he said.

"If Facebook does not recognise that, then it knows nothing either about 'social' or about 'networking' and certainly not about 'community'," he added.

 
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Get the latest headlines from US news and global updates from Pakistan, Nepal, UK, Bangladesh, Russia and US Iran war Live, get all the latest headlines in one place on Hindustan Times.
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