Khaleej Times

Right-wing cries ‘blasphemy’ to muzzle progressiv­e bloggers

- AFP

islamabad — A virulent social media campaign to paint five disappeare­d Pakistani activists as blasphemer­s deserving execution has spotlighte­d how right-wing efforts to muzzle liberal voices using the country’s stringent laws have found a powerful new platform online.

The five men had stood against religious intoleranc­e and at times criticised Pakistan’s military, with several of them running progressiv­e Facebook pages.

They vanished within days of each other earlier this month, sparking fears of a government crackdown. No group has claimed responsibi­lity. Security sources denied being involved.

As publicity surroundin­g their disappeara­nces grew, with protests in major cities, observers such as Digital Rights Foundation founder Nighat Dad began to notice a worrying trend online.

“There are people trying to label these missing bloggers blasphemer­s. And the people supporting ...( them) are being labelled blasphemer­s,” Nighat said.

The allegation can be fatal in deeply conservati­ve nation, where at least 17 people remain on death row for blasphemy.

Rights groups have long criticised the colonial-era legislatio­n as a vehicle for personal vendettas. Even unproven allegation­s can result in mob lynchings.

And now such accusation­s targeting the disappeare­d activists are multiplyin­g on Facebook and Twitter.

“The group of atheists committing blasphemy on Facebook... have been defeated,” said a recent post by Pakistan Defence, a powerful pro-military Facebook page run by anonymous right-wing elements which has 7.5 million likes.

The post, liked more than 5,400 times, triggered a flood of threats including one suggesting the activists’ “bullet riddled corpses should be found beside any gutter”.

Other pages such as ISI Pakistan1, with 192,000 Facebook likes, called for such “enemies of Islam” to be “eliminated”.

The attacks are perpetuate­d by right-wing trolls such as 25-year-old Farhan Virk, who admits he has few real friends but has 54,000 followers on his verified Twitter account.

By re-tweeting the blasphemy charges against the activists, Virk

There are people trying to label these missing bloggers blasphemer­s. and the people supporting ... (them) are being labelled blasphemer­s

Nighat Dad, digital rights activist

gives them a prominence on social media that can influence the mainstream news agenda.

A number of NGOs and observers believe the campaigns to silence socalled progressiv­e voices are carefully coordinate­d.

Digital rights activist Nighat Dad points to what she says is a periodic surge of new right-wing Twitter accounts with just a handful of followers whose “only purpose is to attack us.”

The end result is often self-censorship, with the online attacks following a well-worn pattern.

Journalist Rabia Mehmood criticised Pakistan online after human rights activist Sabeen Mehmood was assassinat­ed in 2015.

Sabeen received a barrage of death and rape threats on Twitter and Facebook, including many from newly-created accounts, accusing her of being anti-state and an enemy of Islam.

“Overnight there were tweets warning me that there were bullets with my name on them for criticisin­g the military and the intelligen­ce agencies,” she said.

“Since then I have started watching what I say.”

The new wave of blasphemy charges that followed the activist disappeara­nces prompted a number of liberal online commentato­rs to close their accounts completely.

Pakistan used its legal agreements with Facebook and Twitter to temporaril­y remove a slew of left-wing accounts in 2014, and enacted a cybercrime law last year that critics say will stifle genuine dissent.

Meanwhile, pages such as Pakistan Defence appear to operate freely, despite content that would appear to contravene basic community standards.

A Twitter spokesman said support teams have been retrained on enforcemen­t policies, “including special sessions on cultural and historical

If they (the bloggers) come back I don’t think they have a life in this country. They will have to leave

Shahzad Ahmed, campaihn director of Bytes for All

contextual­isation of hateful conduct”.

Facebook said it routinely worked to “prohibit hateful content and remove credible threats of physical harm”.

Observers say the blasphemy allegation­s against the missing activists have already put their lives in danger of vigilante attack.

In 2011 a liberal governor who criticised the laws was gunned down in Islamabad, while in 2014 a Christian couple falsely accused of desecratin­g the Holy Quran were killed by a mob, their bodies burned in a brick kiln, to cite just two examples.

“If they come back I don’t think they have a life in this country,” said Shahzad Ahmed, director of campaign group Bytes For All. “They will have to leave.” —

 ?? AFP file ?? Human rights activists holding images of bloggers who have gone missing, during a protest in Islamabad. —
AFP file Human rights activists holding images of bloggers who have gone missing, during a protest in Islamabad. —

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