Why Taimoor Raza’s death sentence does not come as a surprise in Pakistan


For years now, activists, politicians, and journalists have bemoaned the many ways that Pakistan’s antiquated blasphemy laws can be abused

Whether it is to settle an old score or to simply squash political dissent, these so-called blasphemy laws don’t do anything to protect God or his Messenger and, to add more injury to insult, these laws do nothing but harm God’s creation

The very creation which He has in His supreme wisdom created with the ability to exercise free will

When the internet first came into existence, it was hailed as the freest public sphere mankind had ever known

So high were the hopes of nerds and libertarians everywhere that, in 1996, a Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace was penned by John Perry Barlow who hailed the internet as a ‘virus of liberty’ that would take on the ‘governments of the industrial world’

https://www

youtube

com/watch?v=3WS9DhSIWR0 The internet is now teetering on the edge of its mighty pedestal, only 20 years later

 Cyberspace as we know it today is mired in the power plays of politics

Today, corporate giants decide what we see, wear, eat, and love, and governments openly employ algorithms and surveillance methods to barricade citizens from engaging in critical discourse and from taking ownership of their country’s state of affairs

Almost all of us have numbly accepted to living out our lives in this digitised Orwellian dream

Despite knowing that every click of our keyboard is easily monitored and can/will be used against us in the court of law, we continue clicking

Despite knowing that fake news – or ‘alternative facts’ as they are called in some circles – have the power to rig elections and change the course of modern history, we continue to cling onto 20-year-old promises of a golden digital revolution

The internet has been one of the best things to happen to Pakistan because it has amplified nonconformist, minority, and dissenting viewpoints of the people

And naturally, this terrifies the majority government that has done everything from banning certain online groups to disappearing dissenters

This is why the most surprising thing about Raza’s case is that anyone is actually surprised

Ultimately, the verdict against Raza has as little to do with blasphemous content as Aamir Liaquat has to do with Ramazan

The whole thing is pure political theatre and political fiction designed to send a very specific message

A sort of opium that will keep us sheep happily clicking but on the terms of the shepherd

So yes, the prime minister’s cyber crackdown is political and Pakistan’s blasphemy laws remain anachronistic hogwash that continue to fail the Pakistani people

And if you are non-Muslim, anti-establishment, or simply prone to voicing the thoughts in your brain, you best watch your back on the street and your words online

The case of Raza did not kill free speech in Pakistan, simply because between you and I and our omnipresent Big Brother Nawaz Sharif, the internet’s promise of free speech never even reached Pakistan



Date:14-Jun-2017 Reference:View Original Link