Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Internet cut disrupts Khan’s ‘virtual rally’

Election rivals are cracking down on the popular politician’s party ahead of Pakistan’s election

- WITH AFP

Pakistan’s social media and internet services were severely throttled Saturday night, as the party of jailed ex-prime minister Imran Khan held a “virtual rally” ahead of elections in under three weeks.

The outage of Facebook, X, Instagram and YouTube is the second in two weeks coinciding with online campaign events organized by Khan’s Pakistan Tehreeke-Insaf party.

Elections scheduled for 8 February have been marred by allegation­s of pre-poll rigging, with analysts saying the military establishm­ent — Pakistan’s political kingmakers — are squeezing Khan and PTI out of the race.

The event was due to broadcast PTI speeches by livestream but internet disruption­s began in the early evening, before it began.

“We can confirm the nation-scale restrictio­n of social media platforms across Pakistan,” Alp Toker, Director of the Netblocks watchdog organizati­on monitoring cybersecur­ity and internet governance, said.

He told Agence FrancePres­se the outage was “remarkably systematic” and “consistent with previous restrictio­ns imposed during PTI events.”

Khan and many prominent PTI candidates have been barred from standing for election, and in-person campaignin­g has been thwarted by a crackdown forcing party leaders to defect or go undergroun­d.

Nonetheles­s, a Gallup Pakistan survey taken in December confirmed Khan is the nation’s most popular politician.

Google data shows PTI vastly outstrippi­ng competitor­s in online searches for political parties in Pakistan, with 80 per cent of the traffic.

Earlier this month, similar internet disruption marred PTI’s online campaign launch event.

Keyboard campaignin­g

Khan, 71, was ousted in 2022 after falling out with Pakistan’s powerful military leaders who backed him into power in 2018.

In opposition, he waged an unpreceden­ted campaign of defiance against the military establishm­ent which has directly ruled the nation for much of its history.

Khan accused them of engineerin­g his removal from office in a no-confidence vote via a United States-backed conspiracy, and of plotting an assassinat­ion attempt that saw him wounded.

The crackdown against PTI began after Khan’s brief arrest last May sparked riots, with Islamabad saying it had been targeted by “antistate” violence.

Khan is currently languishin­g in jail after a second arrest in August, and has been barred from standing for office over a graft conviction.

 ?? NARINDER NANU/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? SCHOOL students dress in the guise of Hindu deities Lord Ram (center), Laxman (left) and Sita (right) in Amritsar, India, ahead of the consecrati­on ceremony of Ayodhya’s Ram temple.
NARINDER NANU/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE SCHOOL students dress in the guise of Hindu deities Lord Ram (center), Laxman (left) and Sita (right) in Amritsar, India, ahead of the consecrati­on ceremony of Ayodhya’s Ram temple.

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