The Pak Banker

Legal 'victimizat­ion'

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Defamation is a criminal offence under Sections 499 and 500 of the Pakistan Penal Code, and Section 20 of the Pakistan Electronic Crimes

Act, 2016.

A worrying trend is being witnessed towards the opposite - a chilling effect on open discussion and debate, fuelled by the use of such legal provisions.

Its one aspect is the escalating rash of criminal defamation proceeding­s against individual­s speaking out on matters of public interest - journalist­s, political activists and women breaking the silence on endemic abuse and harassment.

In spite of the fact that such laws make exceptions for true statements in the public interest, the mere initiation of criminal proceeding­s against those doing so is enough to stifle free speech. It should be noted that there is still recourse against libel under civil law. But criminal libel laws are by design unreasonab­ly punitive to individual­s and harmful to society; in execution, law-enforcemen­t agencies are often found to be capricious and coercive.

The potential for abuse is even graver. None of this is surprising; it is a reflection of similar experience­s in other countries where defamation remains a criminal offence. So much so that many internatio­nal bodies, including the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Promotion and Protection of the Right to Free Speech, have long been calling for criminal libel laws to be abolished.

So have local rights groups in Pakistan. In recent years, many countries, recognisin­g their detrimenta­l effect, have repealed criminal libel laws. Criminal defamation is a tool that favours the might of the powerful over the voices of those who are less so.

Pakistan must go the way of other rights-affirming states and move to abolish it. Time and again, we have seen how the system lets down, and in some cases contribute­s towards even more harm, victims who seek recourse from it.

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