
Govt orders YouTube account bans: Matiullah Jan, Asad Ali Toor, Siddique Jan among targeted
The Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) began an inquiry on June 2 when the investigating officer of the National Cyber Crime Investigation Agency applied to the court to block these YouTube channels.
Judge Abbas Shah, in his order, wrote that the court was satisfied with the evidence provided by the FIA and that the subject matter 'constitutes offences punishable under the Prevention of Electronic Crimes Act and Penal Laws of Pakistan'.
Other accounts listed included 'Naya Pakistan', 'Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf', 'Rana Uzair Speaks', 'Ahmad Noorani', 'Daily Qudra', and others.
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From midnight raids and enforced disappearances to mass disqualifications, party defections under coercion, media blackouts, social media throttling, and dozens of politically engineered court cases, the message has been loud and clear, this party must be erased at all costs. Yet the public response has been equally resolute, not without a fight, not without our vote. If we examine this unique phenomenon of political resilience of PTI from a sober and analytical lens, it becomes clear that you cannot convince people to start loving the leaders they themselves rejected. In any functional democracy, media plays the role of a mirror. In Pakistan, that mirror has been shattered. In a desperate attempt to marginalise PTI after toppling their elected government, a campaign was initiated to erase PTI and Imran Khan. Mainstream television networks were instructed to erase Imran Khan's name, blur his image, or pretend he does not exist. Anchors were taken off air, columnists silenced, and editors summoned for "guidance." The campaign continues to get viscous and ruthless with every passing day. Communication experts believe that propaganda is only as effective as the public's willingness to believe in it. People listen to what they want to listen. This has been the first flaw in the state's strategy i.e. you cannot convince a population to hate the very leader they themselves chose, defended, and trusted especially when the alternative is riddled with incompetence and corruption. Following the ouster of Imran Khan from the government, he was replaced with an alliance of almost 12 opposition parties. As inflation spiked, governance collapsed, and the public lost hope in the alliance, the tailored media narrative began to collapse under its own weight. Instead of tarnishing PTI, censorship transformed the party into a symbol of resistance. Another key variable that was drastically underestimated was the internet. 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Imran Khan's political narrative, whether you agree with it or not, is the voice of many Pakistanis. The narrative that the Pakistani citizen is not a subject of dynastic families or foreign dictates, but a stakeholder in this nation's future. This idea struck especially deep in the youth, the middle class, and professionals. These segments were historically disengaged from politics but are now fully activated. This moral dimension i.e the belief that PTI is standing for truth against tyranny, is what makes it unshakable, even in the face of brutal repression. Purge, inquisitions, arrests , bans, and smear campaigns only validate their belief that the system is corrupt, and the struggle is righteous. Nowhere is this political loyalty more visible than in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, where PTI has governed with consistency and transparency for over a decade. Khyber Pakhtunkhwa's political relationship with PTI is one of trust. 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2 days ago
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