Pakistan among worst countries for internet freedom: report

The report also found election manipulation in Pakistan through informational tactics through hyper-partisan commentators, bots, or news sites to disseminate false or misleading content.

November 06, 2019 12:42 pm | Updated 12:42 pm IST - Islamabad

Maarten Dors browses through his pictures posted on Flickr at his home in Enschede, Netherlands, Tuesday April 15, 2008.   Without prior notice, Yahoo deleted a photo showing a young Romanian boy smoking a cigarette from it's photo-sharing service, Flickr, on the grounds it violated an unwritten ban on depicting children smoking.  Dors eventually convinced a Yahoo manager that _ far from promoting smoking _ the photo had value as a statement on poverty and street life in Romania. The photo was deleted once more by another employee but has since been restored. (AP Photo/Fred Ernst)

Maarten Dors browses through his pictures posted on Flickr at his home in Enschede, Netherlands, Tuesday April 15, 2008. Without prior notice, Yahoo deleted a photo showing a young Romanian boy smoking a cigarette from it's photo-sharing service, Flickr, on the grounds it violated an unwritten ban on depicting children smoking. Dors eventually convinced a Yahoo manager that _ far from promoting smoking _ the photo had value as a statement on poverty and street life in Romania. The photo was deleted once more by another employee but has since been restored. (AP Photo/Fred Ernst)

Pakistan is among the worst 10 countries in the world for internet and digital media freedom, according to a report by an internet watchdog.

The Freedom House, an international internet rights group, on Tuesday released its ‘Freedom on the Net’ (FoTN) report for the year 2019, titled ‘The Crisis of Social Media’, recording an overall decline in global internet freedom between June 2018 and May 2019.

The watchdog in its report placed Pakistan at 26, out of 100 (100 being the worst) — one place down from last year’s ranking, Dawn News quoted the report as saying.

The country scored 5 out of 25 for obstacles to access, 14 out of 35 for limits on content, and 7 out of 40 for violation of user rights index.

Globally, Pakistan is among the worst 10 countries in terms of internet and digital media freedom. In terms of regional ranking, Pakistan emerged as the third worst country after Vietnam and China, the report said.

Besides decline in internet freedom, the report found election manipulation in Pakistan through informational tactics such as the coordinated use of hyper-partisan commentators, bots, or news sites to disseminate false or misleading content as well as technical tactics, including intentional restrictions on connectivity and blocking of websites, it said.

Regressive policies

The report for Pakistan was authored by the Digital Rights Foundation. DRF Executive Director Nighat Dad said: “The score this year is the culmination of short-term and regressive policies by successive governments. Years worth of draconian legislation and investment in structures that stymie freedom of expression has led to an environment where the internet in Pakistan is more unsafe and less inclusive.”

Internet penetration registered only marginal increases during the reporting period. There are 67 million broadband connections in Pakistan, an increase of 10m since the last report. However, it added that government initiatives to provide access to remote areas had progressed in recent years.

The report observed that authorities frequently disrupt telecommunication services during protests, elections, and religious and national holidays, often citing security concerns. During the 2018 general elections, mobile internet services were notably suspended in parts of Balochistan, and in all of former Federally Administered Tribal Areas (Fata) during both the election period and in the lead-up, the report saids.

The report noted that authorities had upped their efforts to silence critical journalists and activists using a range of techniques. Users were sentenced to death on charges of posting blasphemous content online, although their convictions were under appeal.

Over 800,000 websites hosting political, religious and social content remain blocked while the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority continued to restrict content in a nontransparent and arbitrary fashion, the report said.

It added that state and other actors were known to exert extralegal pressure on publishers and content producers to remove content, and these instances frequently went unreported.

It observed that most online commentators exercised a degree of self-censorship when writing on topics such as religion, blasphemy, civil-military relations, separatist movements, and women’s and other minority communities’ rights.

Increasingly, the report found, coordinated and inauthentic accounts were manipulating online content and spreading disinformation. Online journalists and activists, especially those scrutinising the military or intelligence agencies, had testified to the existence of state-sponsored troll armies being employed to silence dissent.

The report that governments around the world were increasingly using social media to manipulate elections and monitor their citizens, tilting the technology toward digital authoritarianism.

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