Pakistan court suspends order seeking YouTube ban on government critics

Pakistan court suspends order seeking YouTube ban on government critics
In this picture taken on August 4, 2022, Muhammad Naveed, a team member of Pakistan's YouTuber Nasir Dhillon, works on the computer inside his studio in Faisalabad. (AFP/File)
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Updated 11 July 2025
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Pakistan court suspends order seeking YouTube ban on government critics

Pakistan court suspends order seeking YouTube ban on government critics
  • YouTube has warned 27 content creators their channels may be blocked if they fail to comply with a court order seeking to ban them
  • Digital rights groups warn the move could further erode free speech in Pakistan, where authorities face criticism for silencing dissent

ISLAMABAD: A Pakistani court on Friday suspended an order seeking to ban the YouTube channels of more than two dozen critics of the government including former Prime Minister Imran Khan, a defense lawyer said.

Alphabet-owned YouTube this week told 27 content creators that it could block their channels — including those of journalists and Khan and his opposition party Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf — if they failed to comply with a judicial magistrate court order seeking to ban them.

A regional communication manager for YouTube did not respond to a Reuters request for a comment.

The judicial magistrate court in Islamabad had said it was seeking the ban after the National Cyber Crime Investigation Agency criticized the channels in a June 2 report for “sharing highly intimidating, provocative and derogatory contents against state institutions and officials of the state of Pakistan.”

The decision to suspend the order was taken by an additional sessions judge, said Imaan Mazari, the lawyer for two of the YouTube content creators.

In Pakistan, an additional sessions judge is a judicial officer who presides over a sessions court, handling both civil and criminal cases.

“Our submission is that the order has no legal basis. It was a one-sided decision without giving defense a chance to be heard,” Mazari said.

She also said the magistrate court had no jurisdiction over the matter.

The next hearing in the sessions court is on July 21.

In Pakistan’s judicial system, cases start at civil and judicial magistrate courts and appeals are heard in high courts and the Supreme Court.

Digital rights campaigners say that any ban would further undermine free speech in Pakistan, where the authorities are accused of stifling newspapers and television, and social media is seen as one of the few outlets for dissent.


Pakistani facility successfully completes 1,000 liver transplants in a major milestone

Pakistani facility successfully completes 1,000 liver transplants in a major milestone
Updated 02 November 2025
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Pakistani facility successfully completes 1,000 liver transplants in a major milestone

Pakistani facility successfully completes 1,000 liver transplants in a major milestone
  • In Pakistan, patients in need of liver, kidney transplants faced significant challenges due to a lack of medical facilities, specialized infrastructure
  • The Pakistan Kidney and Liver Institute eliminated these challenges by offering free treatment to around 80 percent patients, PM Shehbaz Sharif says

ISLAMABAD: A leading Pakistani medical facility has completed 1,000 liver transplants in the South Asian country, with Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif hailing it as a major milestone in the country’s health sector.

In addition to 1,000 liver transplants, the Pakistan Kidney and Liver Institute (PKLI) has performed 1,100 kidney and 14 bone marrow transplants, and has treated over 4 million patients since 2017, according to Pakistani state media.

Currently, around 80 percent of patients receive free treatment, using advanced technology. For those who can afford it, treatment costs go up to Rs6 million ($21,359), significantly lower than in other countries in the region.

“The sapling planted in 2017 has become a full-fledged tree today, benefiting 4 million patients so far,” PM Sharif said of the state-of-the-art medical facility.

“PKLI treats 80 percent of its patients free of cost, enabling the poor to benefit from international standard facilities.”

In Pakistan, patients in need of kidney and liver transplants faced significant challenges due to a lack of medical facilities and specialized infrastructure. Many of these patients had to opt for costly treatment abroad.

The PKLI has eliminated these challenges by opening the doors to treatment within Pakistan. The institute also offers services in urology, gastroenterology, nephrology, interventional radiology, advanced endoscopy, and robotic surgeries.

In the past, authorities say, the institute suffered challenges such as freezing of its funds and investigations against its management on political basis.

“The team that worked hard to establish the PKLI and restart its operations to bring it back to its full potential deserves appreciation,” Sharif added.


Lahore ranks world’s most polluted city as thick smog blankets Pakistani metropolis

Lahore ranks world’s most polluted city as thick smog blankets Pakistani metropolis
Updated 02 November 2025
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Lahore ranks world’s most polluted city as thick smog blankets Pakistani metropolis

Lahore ranks world’s most polluted city as thick smog blankets Pakistani metropolis
  • The Punjab government has taken various steps, including deploying anti-smog guns that spray water to curb air pollution
  • Locals urge a stronger government response such as providing free public transport to reduce number of vehicles on roads

Lahore was ranked the world’s most polluted city on Sunday, according to Swiss monitoring group IQAir, as thick smog engulfed Pakistan’s second largest city.

IQAir’s reading for Lahore was 237 at noon local time (0700 GMT) and labelled as ‘very unhealthy’, far above the ‘good’ air threshold of 0-50.

Despite the conditions, residents still gathered for Sunday morning cricket.

“We come to the ground for fresh air,” said local resident Mohammad Zubair. “If we have to wear masks here too, where will fresh air come from?“

The Punjab government has taken various steps including deploying anti-smog guns spraying water to curb pollution but it offers temporary relief only.

Plain areas of Pakistan’s province of Punjab, of which Lahore is capital, are prone to thick smog every winter as cold, heavy air traps construction dust, vehicle emissions and smoke from agricultural fires.

Locals urged a stronger government response such as providing free public transport, and accused authorities of unequal implementation of anti-smog measures across the city.

“Government is spraying [mist through anti-smog guns] but that is happening in posh areas. Here in these areas, in inner Lahore, there are no anti-smog guns, nothing has been done,” said Kashif Butt.

“The government should make transport free [of cost], so that there are less bikes [on roads].”

— With input from Reuters

 


Three policemen injured in roadside blast in Pakistan’s northwest

Three policemen injured in roadside blast in Pakistan’s northwest
Updated 02 November 2025
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Three policemen injured in roadside blast in Pakistan’s northwest

Three policemen injured in roadside blast in Pakistan’s northwest
  • The attack took place in the Hangu district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
  • No group immediately claimed responsibility for the bomb attack

PESHAWAR: Three policemen were injured in an improvised explosive device (IED) blast that targeted a police convoy in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, police said on Sunday.

The attack took place in the Hangu district of KP, which borders Afghanistan and has witnessed a surge in militancy in recent years. No group immediately claimed responsibility for the attack.

In a statement issued from his office, KP Chief Minister Sohail Afridi directed authorities provide immediate and best medical assistance to policemen injured in the bomb attack.

“Those involved in cowardly attacks will be brought to justice,” he promised, seeking a detailed report into the incident from the provincial police chief. “We pay tribute to the courage and dutifulness of police personnel.”

The chief minister directed authorities further tighten security measures in the province and keep a close watch on suspicious elements.

KP has witnessed a surge in militancy since a fragile truce between the Pakistani Taliban, or the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), and the state broke down in November 2022.

The TTP and other militant groups have since mounted their attacks against security forces, besides targeted killings and kidnappings of law enforcers and government officials, in recent months.

Islamabad has frequently accused neighboring Afghanistan of sheltering anti-Pakistan groups which launch cross-border attacks. Afghan officials deny allowing the use of their soil against any country.

The two countries last month engaged in fierce fighting along their 2,600-kilometer-long border over the surge in attacks, leaving dozens of people dead on both sides, before they reached a ceasefire in Doha, Qatar on Oct. 19. The two sides will meet again on Nov. 6 to discuss a mechanism to keep in check militant groups operation in border areas.

Earlier in the day, a police constable was killed while two others were injured as explosives detonated inside a Counter Terrorism Department (CTD) police station in KP’s provincial capital of Peshawar, a police official said.

“Initially, after verification, we can say that some stored explosive material which was present inside the storeroom of the police station has exploded,” Capital City Police Officer (CCPO) Dr. Mian Saeed told reporters.


India space agency launches its heaviest satellite

India space agency launches its heaviest satellite
Updated 02 November 2025
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India space agency launches its heaviest satellite

India space agency launches its heaviest satellite
  • The Indian Navy said the CMS-03 satellite would help ‘secure communication links between ships, aircraft, submarines’
  • The satellite is an upgraded version of rocket that launched India’s unmanned craft that landed on the Moon in Aug. 2023

SRIHARIKOTA, India: India launched its heaviest ever communication satellite on Sunday, the latest step in the country’s ambitious space program. 

The CMS-03 satellite blasted off from Sriharikota in the southern state of Andhra Pradesh at 5:26 p.m. (1156 GMT).

“Our space sector continues to make us proud!” said Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who wants to send an Indian astronaut to the Moon by 2040.

Weighing about 4,410 kilograms (9,722 pounds), it is “the heaviest communication satellite” launched in the country, the Indian Space Research Organization said Thursday.

The Indian Navy said the satellite would help “secure communication links between ships, aircraft, submarines.”

The CMS-03 satellite was sent into orbit from the towering 43.5 meter (143 foot) tall LVM3-M5 launch vehicle.

It is an upgraded version of the rocket that launched India’s unmanned craft that landed on the Moon in August 2023.

Only Russia, the United States and China have previously achieved a controlled landing on the lunar surface.

The country has flexed its spacefaring ambitions in the last decade, with its space program growing considerably in size and momentum.

Shubhanshu Shukla, a test pilot with the Indian Air Force, this year became the second Indian to travel to space and the first to reach the International Space Station — a key step toward India’s own crewed mission planned for 2027.


Pakistan’s Punjab bans public gatherings for another week to ensure order, public peace

Pakistan’s Punjab bans public gatherings for another week to ensure order, public peace
Updated 02 November 2025
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Pakistan’s Punjab bans public gatherings for another week to ensure order, public peace

Pakistan’s Punjab bans public gatherings for another week to ensure order, public peace
  • The ban was initially imposed on Oct. 8 amid violent protests by the Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan religio-political party
  • Assessments suggest ‘threat perception to public peace, tranquility and law and order has not abated,’ home department says

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s most populous Punjab province on Sunday extended a ban on the gathering of four or more persons by another seven days till Nov. 9, the provincial home department said, in a bid to maintain law and order and public peace.

The ban was initially imposed on Oct. 8 amid violent protests by the Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP) religio-political party, and has since been extended multiple times.

TLP supporters had clashed with police on the outskirts of Lahore on their way to Islamabad. The clashes had killed five people, including two policemen, and injured more than 100 others.

The party said its march toward Islamabad was for peaceful purposes, but the violent protests prompted the Pakistani government to declare the TLP as a proscribed organization.

“Home Department, Government of the Punjab, vide Order of even number dated October 25, 2025 imposed following restrictions under Section 144 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898, across the entire Province,” the Punjab home department said in a notification on Sunday, adding that the restrictions have been extended by another seven days.

“A complete ban on the assembly, gathering, procession, or sit-in of four (04) or more persons in any public place, street, road, or open space.”

It said it had reviewed latest reports and threat assessments shared by law enforcement and intelligence agencies, and it was evident that the “threat perception to public peace, tranquility, and law and order has not abated.”

Other restrictions include a ban on the carrying, display of all kinds of weapons, both licensed and unlicensed, in public places; the of loudspeakers or other sound amplifying devices for provocative, sectarian or inflammatory content, other than the conventional use for prayer calls sermons at mosques; and publishing, disseminating, or displaying of any provocative, hateful, or sectarian material that may incite public sentiment or disturb inter-faith and sectarian harmony.

“The continuance of the restrictions is deemed essential to prevent any potential disturbance to public order, sectarian strife, or commission of any offense, and to ensure the safety and security of the lives and property of the general public,” the home department said.

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