Facebook was where Pakistan could debate religion. Now it's a tool to punish 'blasphemers'
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2017/jul/19/facebook-pakistan-blasphemy-laws-censorship
Taimoor Raza, a 30-year-old Shia Muslim from a poor but literate family, was sentenced to death in June by an anti-terrorist court in Pakistan. His crime? Allegedly insulting the prophet Muhammad on Facebook.
It occurred during an online debate with a man who turned out to be an undercover counter-terrorism agent. His death sentence, the first to result from a social media posting, is an extreme example of the Pakistani governments escalating battle to enforce its blasphemy laws, which criminalize insulting Islam.
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You see what the problem [for authorities] is with social media. They cannot stop information. It levels the playing field for us, Goraya said, adding that religious debate on Facebook had been almost silenced.
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By next year, whether Facebook cooperates might not matter: Pakistan is in the process of rerouting its internet traffic through China, laying a 500-mile fiber optic cable from the China-Pakistan border to Rawalpindi. Some fear the project will lead to a block of Facebook in Pakistan, similar to the one in China. The project is expected to be finished next year.
It's great that the government of Pakistan has solved every other problem that their citizens face, and can use undercover police on the Internet to arrest people for questioning religion.