Pak court orders ban on Google, Yahoo, Hotmail, 6 other websites
Justice Mazher Iqbal Sidhu issued the order while hearing a petition filed by a man named Muhammad Sidiq who claimed these websites were publishing sacrilegious material.
Media reports said the Bahawalpur bench of the Lahore High Court yesterday directed the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority to immediately block nine websites, including Google, Yahoo, MSN, Hotmail, YouTube, Bing and Amazon, for publishing and promoting sacrilegious and blasphemous material.
Justice Mazher Iqbal Sidhu issued the order while hearing a petition filed by a man named Muhammad Sidiq who claimed these websites were publishing sacrilegious material.
The judge also ordered the PTA chairman to appear in court on June 28 with relevant materials.
Sidiq, in his petition, sought a ban on the websites for publishing blasphemous materials and twisting facts about the Quran.
Aslam Dhakkar, head of a local bar association, was quoted as saying that the court had given a historic decision.
He said the legal fraternity in Bahawalpur would observe a strike today to protest the publication of blasphemous material by the websites.
However, officials of the PTA said that they had received no instructions to block the websites.
They said they had only seen media reports about the court's order.
Wahaj-us-Siraj, a spokesman for the Internet Service Providers Association of Pakistan, said his organisation had not received any directions from the PTA to block websites.
Pakistani authorities had blocked popular social networking website Facebook in May over the holding of a competition on blasphemous caricatures of Prophet Mohammed.
The access to the website was later restored on the orders of the court.
The Economic Times Business News App for the Latest News in Business, Sensex, Stock Market Updates & More.
The Economic Times News App for Quarterly Results, Latest News in ITR, Business, Share Market, Live Sensex News & More.