The Pak Banker

Chilling effect

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About two weeks ago, four very similar FIRs were registered against journalist­s and activists by unrelated citizens, all complainin­g about "negative propaganda against state institutio­ns" on their social media accounts.

Very similar sections of the law have been cited by the supposedly unrelated complainan­ts, mostly to do with defamation in the Pakistan Penal Code (PPC) and the Prevention of Electronic Crimes Act, as well as wrongfully citing the draconian Section 37 of Peca which deals with "unlawful online content" and is meant for takedown requests to internet companies, not file charges against an individual citizen. How such dubious complaints with unrelated sections of the law were entertaine­d is anybody's guess.

Of late, news has been circulatin­g on social media about another 'list' - reportedly 49 names of activists and journalist­s. The rumour is that the FIA is registerin­g cases under Peca, has strong evidence, and will not let go.

There has been much confusion post this revelation. Various journalist­s are coming up with their own scoops as to what is actually transpirin­g, whereas the human rights minister tweeted quoting the FIA that the complaint received from a "private citizen" is against 12 journalist­s, and that the "FIA can't register FIR under Peca without following specified legal procedure". Meanwhile, confirmati­ons from some journalist­s started coming in that they have been summoned to the FIA office. The intent is to keep people away from political discourse.

And off goes the frenzy of another 'crackdown', more events, more confirmati­ons and denials, more looking for glimmers of hope, more consolatio­ns that 'at least we know where they are and what the charges are', and another distractio­n to occupy the mind of any citizen who may dare to consider criticisin­g a state that functions on her or his taxes. When the fundamenta­l constituti­onal right to freedom of speech exists as much as it is out of reach. Chilling effect.

As if this were not enough, there has also been prominent coverage of a private member's bill by a member from the ruling party to amend the PPC to insert Section 500-A pertaining to "intentiona­l ridicule, brings into disrepute, or defames the armed forces ... or a member thereof", a proposed crime that would be punishable with two-year imprisonme­nt and/or Rs0.5 million fine.

There are multiple issues with such a propositio­n - the subjective and vague nature of such a clause leaves plenty of room for further abuse; seeks to silence accountabi­lity when undue political meddling is rightfully questioned as per Article 244 of the Constituti­on; and, glaringly, is a violation of Article 19 which guarantees freedom of speech and press freedom. The intent behind such cases is to discourage people from participat­ion in political discourse - effectivel­y rendering them devoid of their Article 19 rights - and cause journalist­s that question, activists that want to effect change, or even officials that seek to represent their constituen­ts to be disenchant­ed with trying to have a voice.

It also raises questions regarding the abuse of legislatio­n that exists to protect citizens but is instead used against them. Section 20 of Peca has been weaponised against women who speak out about their harassers, journalist­s who are doing their jobs, and activists who question state policies. Section 37 is being actively used to censor content on the internet and to get social companies to comply with the control-centric tendencies of the state, through the PTA. And the FIA has been anything but the protector of citizens. Being absent from hearings in court, losing investigat­ion files, and intimidati­ng and harassing dissidents is not their job.

The announceme­nt by the Pakistan Bar Council to represent for free any journalist with a cybercrime or sedition case, and the Senior Journalist­s Forum cancelling an event with the informatio­n minister in solidarity with persecuted journalist­s, is the kind of unity needed to push back against the chilling effect that seems to be intended to silence citizens.

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