Eastern Eye (UK)

Islamabad lifts TikTok ban

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PAKISTAN last Thursday (1) lifted a second ban imposed on TikTok over “immoral and unethical” content after the video sharing app again offered to moderate uploads.

A court in the northweste­rn city of Peshawar last month ordered the communicat­ions regulator to block the app over videos that it deemed contrary to the deeply conservati­ve country’s moral values.

“The app has assured us it will filter and moderate content,” Jahanzeb Mehsud, a lawyer for Pakistan Telecommun­ications Agency, told AFP.

The Chinese-owned platform – wildly popular among Pakistani youth, particular­ly in rural areas – had also agreed to moderate content after the first brief ban in October.

One of Prime minister Imran Khan’s advisers has previously blamed it for promoting the “exploitati­on, objectific­ation and sexualisat­ion” of young girls.

TikTok welcomed the removal of the ban. Freedom of speech advocates have long criticised the creeping government censorship and control of internet. Last year, regulators had asked YouTube to immediatel­y block all videos they consider “objectiona­ble” from being accessed, a demand criticised by rights campaigner­s.

A PAKISTANI anti-terrorism court has sentenced five leaders of Mumbai attack mastermind Hafiz Saeed’s Jamaat-ud-Dawah (JuD) to nine years of imprisonme­nt each in a terror financing case.

Three of them – Umar Bahadar, Nasarullah and Samiullah – have been convicted for the first time since the Anti-Terrorism Court (ATC) Lahore pronounced its verdict some time ago in the terror financing cases registered by the Counter-Terrorism Department (CTD) of the Punjab police.

The other two – JuD spokespers­on Yahya Mujahid and senior leader Prof Zafar Iqbal – had already been convicted for many years in other terror financing cases.

ATC Lahore Judge Ejaz Ahmad Buttar last Saturday (3) handed down a nine-year imprisonme­nt to each five of them. The judge also ordered a sixmonth jail term to Saeed’s brother-in-law Hafiz Abdul Rehman Makki in the same case.

The court found the JuD/LeT leaders guilty of offence of terrorism financing. They had been collecting funds and unlawfully financing the proscribed organisati­on, LeT (Lashkar-e-Taiba). The court has also ordered confiscati­on of assets made from funds collected through terrorism financing, the CTD said.

The JuD leaders were presented in the court amid high security and the media was not allowed to cover the proceeding­s. The CTD of Punjab Police had registered 41 FIRs against the JuD leaders, including 70-year-old Saeed, in terror financing cases. The trial courts have so far decided 37 of them.

The ATC had sentenced the LeT founder, Saeed, for a collective imprisonme­nt of 36 years on terror finance charges under sections 11-N of Anti-Terrorism Act 1997 in five cases so far. Saeed’s jail terms will run concurrent­ly. That means he will not stay in jail for many years. He is serving his term in Lahore’s Kot Lakhpat jail along with other convicted JuD leaders. Saeed-led JuD is the front organisati­on for the LeT which is responsibl­e for carrying out the 2008 Mumbai attack that killed 166 people, including six Americans.

Saeed, a UN designated terrorist whom the US has placed a $10 million (£7m) bounty on, was arrested on July 17, 2019 last year in the terror financing cases. The US Department of the Treasury has designated Saeed as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist. He was listed under the UN Security Council

Resolution 1267 in December 2008.

The ATC Lahore had also sentenced LeT operation commander Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi for a collective imprisonme­nt of 15 years on three counts in a terror financing case. He will have to serve in jail for five years as his sentence in three counts (five years each) will run concurrent­ly.

The global terror financing watchdog Financial Action Task Force (FATF) is instrument­al in pushing Islamabad to take measures against terrorists roaming freely in Pakistan and using its territory to carry out attacks in India and elsewhere.

The Paris-based FATF placed Pakistan on the Grey List in June 2018 and asked Islamabad to implement a plan of action to curb money laundering and terror financing by the end of 2019 but the deadline was extended later on due to Covid-19 pandemic. In February, the FATF retained Pakistan on its Grey List until June.

With Pakistan’s continuati­on in the ‘grey list’, the country may find it difficult to get financial aid from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, the World Bank and the Asian Developmen­t Bank, thus further enhancing problems for the cash-strapped nation.

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