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Pakistan Restricts Internet Access Amid Rare Opposition Online Rally

313Ghazi

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Islamabad — Authorities in Pakistan temporarily slowed down internet services and blocked access to major social media platforms Sunday amid a rare online rally organized by the party of imprisoned former Prime Minister Imran Khan.

The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, or PTI, said its “virtual power show” was held in response to a government crackdown on party workers and election-related public gatherings.

“In what was an expected move, the illegitimate, fascist regime has slowed down internet speed & disrupted social media platforms all across Pakistan, prior to the PTI’s historic Virtual Jalsa (political rally)!” the party said in a statement. “This is proof of the fear of the unprecedented popularity of Imran Khan’s PTI!”

NetBlocks, an independent global internet monitor promoting digital rights, cybersecurity, and governance, confirmed the disruptive internet connectivity in Pakistan.

“Live metrics show a nation-scale disruption to social media platforms across #Pakistan, including X/Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and YouTube; the incident comes just ahead of a major virtual gathering organized by persecuted opposition leader Imran Khan's party, PTI,” NetBlocks wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter.

There was no immediate government response to the allegations.

The online PTI rally comes as election officials prepare to organize national elections on February 8.

Khan, 71, has been in a political showdown with the country's powerful military since a parliamentary no-confidence motion toppled his government in April 2022.

The cricket star-turned-prime minister rejected the motion as illegal, accusing the United States of orchestrating his ouster with the help of the Pakistani military, charges Washington and Islamabad reject.

Since his ousting, Khan has faced dozens of lawsuits filed by authorities, which he claims to be a ploy by the military to prevent his comeback to power because of his advocacy for an independent foreign policy for Pakistan, one free from the influence of the United States.

In early August, Khan was found guilty of corruption and sentenced to three years in prison, which he denies. Although a higher court later suspended his sentence and ordered his release on bail, Pakistani authorities have refused, citing numerous other lawsuits against him.

A military-backed government crackdown on Khan's party has led to the arrest of scores of his key aides, including former ministers and lawmakers, on charges they played a role in attacks on army installations during PTI-led anti-government protests last May.

While many PTI members remain in jail and await trial, dozens of others have been freed after publicly denouncing Khan, quitting his party, or joining other groups allegedly under military pressure.

The military has staged three coups against elected prime ministers since Pakistan gained independence from Britain in 1947, and it ruled the country for more than three decades. Critics say army generals influence policymaking significantly, even when not in power.

According to public opinion polls, Khan remains the country’s most popular politician, and his party is rated as Pakistan's most considerable political force.

 

Pakistan's jailed Imran Khan uses AI-crafted speech to lure votes​


ISLAMABAD, Dec 18 (Reuters) - Pakistan's jailed former prime minister, Imran Khan, whose party isn't allowed to hold public rallies, used an audio clip generated by artificial intelligence (AI) late Sunday to address a virtual rally in the first event of its kind in the country.

The audio clip, marred by internet disruptions, was played over the AI-generated image which appears to be speaking, during an internet rally of Khan's Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party. It drew more than 1.4 million views on YouTube and was attended live by tens of thousands on other social media platforms.

"Our party is not allowed to hold public rallies," Khan said in the clip, urging supporters to turn out in large numbers at general elections set for Feb 8. "Our people are being kidnapped and their families are being harassed."

The disruptions to livestreaming fuelled transparency concerns about the upcoming elections, with users nationwide complaining of slow internet speeds and throttling, a technique telecoms regulators use to choke streaming on apps.

Pakistan's telecoms regulator said the interruptions were being investigated, but that internet accessibility overall appeared to be normal.

Khan's speech was generated from a written version he had approved from prison, said officials of his party, which staged the event because it faces a state-backed crackdown on physical gatherings, while its leader is blacked out of media.

Jailed since he was convicted and sentenced to three years on graft charges on Aug. 5, Khan is embroiled in dozens of court cases, with some trials held in prison behind closed doors, which legal experts say infringes his right to fair proceedings.

Murtaza Solangi, information minister in Pakistan's caretaker government assigned to supervise the elections which has been suspected of favouring Khan's opponents, said the query on internet disruptions could be referred to the telecom regulator or the ministry of information technology, saying, "I have no information about it."

He, however, didn't respond to whether it was a violation of free speech and assembly mandated by election laws for a free and fair voting, which in this case could be a pre-poll rigging.


A political crisis has swirled around the 71-year-old former cricket star since his ouster last year as prime minister in a vote of confidence in parliament. The party crackdown followed a May assault on military sites by supporters protesting his brief arrest.

Khan won the last general election in 2018, a victory his opponents say was achieved with help from the military, which often plays an outsized role in making or breaking governments in Pakistan.

He, too, blames his removal on the military, after a falling-out with generals over the appointment of the chief of Pakistan's main spy agency. The military denies this.

 
What's wrong with it now? Nothing new.
So a continuing problem shouldn't be seen as a problem? Is that your contribution to this conversation?
 
Shows how insecure the current rulers of Pakistan are. This is a big indicator to how elections will play out. If they can’t tolerate PTI gathering on social media, forget fair ground for PTI in election.
 
I just want to know.. who gives them these brilliant ideas.....

I mean that guy surely deserves a 21 gun salute.... just that he should be standing in front of the guns...
 
Islamabad — Authorities in Pakistan temporarily slowed down internet services and blocked access to major social media platforms Sunday amid a rare online rally organized by the party of imprisoned former Prime Minister Imran Khan.

The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, or PTI, said its “virtual power show” was held in response to a government crackdown on party workers and election-related public gatherings.

“In what was an expected move, the illegitimate, fascist regime has slowed down internet speed & disrupted social media platforms all across Pakistan, prior to the PTI’s historic Virtual Jalsa (political rally)!” the party said in a statement. “This is proof of the fear of the unprecedented popularity of Imran Khan’s PTI!”

NetBlocks, an independent global internet monitor promoting digital rights, cybersecurity, and governance, confirmed the disruptive internet connectivity in Pakistan.

“Live metrics show a nation-scale disruption to social media platforms across #Pakistan, including X/Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and YouTube; the incident comes just ahead of a major virtual gathering organized by persecuted opposition leader Imran Khan's party, PTI,” NetBlocks wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter.

There was no immediate government response to the allegations.

The online PTI rally comes as election officials prepare to organize national elections on February 8.

Khan, 71, has been in a political showdown with the country's powerful military since a parliamentary no-confidence motion toppled his government in April 2022.

The cricket star-turned-prime minister rejected the motion as illegal, accusing the United States of orchestrating his ouster with the help of the Pakistani military, charges Washington and Islamabad reject.

Since his ousting, Khan has faced dozens of lawsuits filed by authorities, which he claims to be a ploy by the military to prevent his comeback to power because of his advocacy for an independent foreign policy for Pakistan, one free from the influence of the United States.

In early August, Khan was found guilty of corruption and sentenced to three years in prison, which he denies. Although a higher court later suspended his sentence and ordered his release on bail, Pakistani authorities have refused, citing numerous other lawsuits against him.

A military-backed government crackdown on Khan's party has led to the arrest of scores of his key aides, including former ministers and lawmakers, on charges they played a role in attacks on army installations during PTI-led anti-government protests last May.

While many PTI members remain in jail and await trial, dozens of others have been freed after publicly denouncing Khan, quitting his party, or joining other groups allegedly under military pressure.

The military has staged three coups against elected prime ministers since Pakistan gained independence from Britain in 1947, and it ruled the country for more than three decades. Critics say army generals influence policymaking significantly, even when not in power.

According to public opinion polls, Khan remains the country’s most popular politician, and his party is rated as Pakistan's most considerable political force.


They want to "ban" the internet but still want $50billion in "IT Exports" .. go figure out how the boots think ( or don't ! )
 
Colonial Army leaders can try whatever, they have been exposed, country will be taken back by Pakistanis..

Btw: Maverick Supersonic is back
 
The joke is upon the ruling elite and the establishment. There were making fun of this as usual but then had to resort on blocking the internet and other social apps to restrict people from joining. Guess who had the last laugh!
 
So extremely thin skinned. So incredibly insecure. They couldn't tolerate gatherings. Now they are banning virtual meetings. We will never forget how these boomers behaved like failures. History will laugh at these dinosaurs.
 
I thought my network provider had some issues, i was cursing them:ROFLMAO::ROFLMAO::ROFLMAO:. youtube yesterday was too slow!
 

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