Thursday, May 20, 2010


Pakistan has now blocked YouTube as well as renowned devil worshippers' site Facebook The Pakistani government says the block is a result of an increase in 'sacrilegious' clips on the video-sharing site.
A Facebook page encouraging users to post images of the prophet Mohammad was the reason for yesterday's action, since the practice is considered to be blasphemous under Islam.
Reports have also suggested that access to photo-sharing site Flickr and online encyclopaedia Wikipedia is currently restricted.
In a statement, the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority confirmed it had ordered operators to shut down YouTube 'in view of growing sacrilegious content' on it.
The decision was reached after all 'possible avenues were used within its jurisdiction, including using regular channels available on the Facebook and YouTube to launch protest, to avoid appearances of derogatory material available on their web sites', the body explained.
Pakistan's Facebook ban is in place until 31st May, though it's unclear if the YouTube block will also be temporary.
Microblogging site Twitter is benefiting from the action, it turns out, with an influx of new users because of the unavailability of the other sites.
'Sad and embarrassing day in the history of Pakistan. Tough times to be a Pakistani. Questionable decisions in a so called democracy,' tweeted one
Pakistan bans YouTube, Facebook

Pakistan blocks YouTube over blasphemous material
 Updated at: 1200 PST,  Thursday, May 20, 2010
 ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has blocked the popular video sharing website YouTube in a bid to contain blasphemous material, officials said on Thursday.

The blockade came hours after the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) directed Internet service providers to stop access to social network Facebook indefinitely on Wednesday because of an online competition to draw the Prophet Mohammad (Peace be upon him) in gross violation of fundamental human rights pertaining to one’s religion.

Wahaj-us-Siraj, the CEO of Nayatel, an Internet service provider, said PTA issued an order late on Wednesday seeking an "immediate" blockade of YouTube.

"It was a serious instruction as they wanted us to do it quickly and let them know after that," he said while talking to a UK-based news agency.

YouTube was also blocked in the Muslim country in 2007 for about a year for what it called un-Islamic videos.

A PTA official, who declined to be identified, said the action was taken after the authority determined that some sacrilegious caricatures of the Prophet Mohammad were transferred from Facebook to YouTube.

Representation of any prophet is deemed un-Islamic and blasphemous in Islam, let alone the caricature or cartoon of these divine personages.

Siraj said the blocking of the two websites would cut up to 25 percent of total Internet traffic in Pakistan.

"It'll have an impact on the overall Internet traffic as they eat up 20 to 25 percent of the country's total 65 giga-bytes traffic," he said.

Publications of similar cartoons in Danish newspapers in 2005 sparked deadly protests in Muslim countries. Around 50 people were killed during violent protests in Muslim countries in 2006 over the cartoons, five of them in Pakistan.

Al Qaeda claimed responsibility for a suicide attack on Denmark's embassy in Islamabad in 2008, killing six people, saying it was in revenge for publication of the caricatures.

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