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Pak to lift ban on YouTube: Malik

Islamabad,Dec 29: Pakistan will unblock the popular video sharing website ‘YouTube' within 24 hours, the country's Interior Minister Rehman Malik has said, after over three months ban.Mr. Malik announced the government's plan to lift the

PTI PTI Updated on: December 29, 2012 21:42 IST
pak to lift ban on youtube malik
pak to lift ban on youtube malik

Islamabad,Dec 29: Pakistan will unblock the popular video sharing website ‘YouTube' within 24 hours, the country's Interior Minister Rehman Malik has said, after over three months ban.




Mr. Malik announced the government's plan to lift the ban on YouTube and Twitter on Friday night, saying precautions would be taken to filter blasphemous material and pornography.

“I chaired a high level (meeting with) all stakeholders on the (YouTube). (Good) job by PTA (to) block anti-Islamic material! (Please expect YouTube) unblocked in 24 hrs,” he said in a tweet.

The minister said that the decision to revoke the ban on YouTube and Twitter was being taken due to huge public demand, but added that the telecom regulator would install a firewall to block unseemly content.

Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf had in mid-September directed authorities to block YouTube for hosting “blasphemous material”, including clips from the movie ‘Innocence Of Muslims'

The film triggered violent protests by right wing groups across Pakistan and the government itself sanctioned a day of protests on September 21, which was observed as “Love the Prophet Day”.

Twenty-three people were killed and property worth billions of rupees was destroyed during these protests.

The Express Tribune newspaper criticised the government for continuing with the ban on YouTube.

“The original excuse for the ban—that the website was hosting an anti-Islam video—can no longer be the justification given that few even remember anything about the video now,” said the editorial.

“This is purely a naked power play by the government and one that we should resist. This is about controlling our behaviour and denying us access to the internet.

This is about the only logical explanation left since YouTube has millions of videos of which a bare handful would be considered objectionable by the government and the judiciary,” it said.

The editorial said the government should realise that it is not possible to censor the internet “the way that governments used to censor media in the print age.”
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