Times of Oman

Pakistan investigat­ing social media users for anti-army posts

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LAHORE/ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has begun a crackdown on online criticism of its powerful military, with up to 200 social media accounts under investigat­ion, a security official said on Monday.

The crackdown is being carried out by the civilian Federal Investigat­ion Agency (FIA) after Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan directed it to take action against social media users posting anti-military material.

“We have received a huge list of suspects, active against national institutio­ns, but we have identified 18 out of over 200 social media activists,” a senior FIA official said.

“They are accused of spreading negative material against the army and other institutio­ns,” added the official, who declined to be identified as he is not authorised to speak to the media.

At least two people have been interrogat­ed and released, he said.

Pakistan’s military has staged numerous coups and ruled the country for about half is history since its creation in 1947.

The military remains a powerful political force even under civilian government­s, and relations between the generals and civilian leaders can be sensitive.

The crackdown on online dissent comes after a lengthy inquiry into a newspaper report that gave details leaked from a high-level security meeting.

Uproar over the report threatened to reopen a rift between the army and civilian government. Interior Minister Nisar, in ordering the crackdown, said the security forces had to be protected.

“Unwarrante­d criticism of security forces and other institutio­ns responsibl­e for the defence of the realm is not allowed,” Nisar said in a statement last week.

Denounced investigat­ions

The opposition Pakistani Tehreeke-Insaf (PTI), some of whose members have been investigat­ed under a tough new cyber crime law, denounced the investigat­ions. “It is a violation of fundamenta­l rights,” said PTI spokesman Naeemul Haque.

In January, five activists critical of the military went missing. Four later reappeared but left the country after being accused of sharing blasphemou­s content online.

One of the activists later said intelligen­ce agents were responsibl­e for his abduction but he declined to say which agency he thought they came from. One person apparently caught up in the investigat­ion is journalist Taha Siddiqui who said that last week, an FIA officer told him to appear for questionin­g. He did not keep the appointmen­t and instead filed a court petition claiming harassment.

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