Pakistan blocks Wikipedia citing ‘sacrilegious’ content

Regulator says the web site had till late Friday to heed its warning, with out elaborating on the content material in query.

Wikipedia
The Wikimedia Basis referred to as on the Muslim-majority nation to revive entry to Wikipedia [File: Boris Roessler/EPA]

Pakistan has banned Wikipedia after threatening the crowd-sourced on-line encyclopedia over what it has labelled “sacrilegious content material”, the Wikimedia Basis introduced on Saturday.

Social media giants Fb and YouTube have additionally been blocked previously by the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority over content material deemed blasphemous, a extremely delicate concern in Muslim-majority Pakistan. Their ban was lifted.

In line with native media outlet Daybreak, a PTA spokesperson mentioned the web site was blocked on Saturday as a consequence of non-compliance with the establishment’s order.

The PTA on Wednesday mentioned the web site had till late Friday to heed the warning, with out elaborating on the content material in query.

“PTA has degraded Wikipedia companies within the nation on account of not blocking/eradicating sacrilegious contents,” the authority added.

The web site has beforehand confronted restrictions on a few of its pages.

In response to the PTA, the Wikimedia Basis – which runs Wikipedia – referred to as on Pakistani authorities to revive entry to the web site.

“We consider that entry to data is a human proper. A block of Wikipedia in Pakistan denies the fifth most populous nation on the planet entry to the biggest free data repository,” it posted on Twitter on Saturday.

“We hope that the Pakistan authorities joins us in a dedication to data as a human proper and restores entry to Wikipedia and Wikimedia tasks promptly, in order that the individuals of Pakistan can proceed to obtain and share data with the world.”

Pakistanis on social media criticised the choice as a “regressive” transfer and a humiliation to the nation’s international picture.

Freedom of speech advocates have lengthy criticised what they are saying is creeping authorities censorship and management of Pakistan’s web and printed and digital media.

Pakistan blocked YouTube from 2012 to 2016 after it carried a movie concerning the Prophet Muhammad that led to violent protests throughout the Muslim world.

In 2020, Pakistani regulators had requested YouTube to instantly block all movies they contemplate “objectionable” from being accessed within the nation, a requirement criticised by rights campaigners.

Lately, the nation has additionally blocked the wildly widespread video-sharing app TikTok a number of instances over “indecent” and “immoral” content material.

The app, owned by China-based ByteDance, has been downloaded thousands and thousands of instances in Pakistan.

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