Facebook madness : A legal view
Facebook madness
Islamabad, May 29: The "Everybody Draw
Mohammed Day" competition hosted on Facebook, our society's response to
the offensive competition and the banning of the entire website along
with hundreds of other websites by Pakistan Telecommunication Authority
on Lahore High Court's orders highlights the dangerous entanglement of
law and religion in Pakistan. The competition was crass and malicious
for it was initiated with the intent to offend Muslims by mocking their
belief that creating depictions of the Prophet (PBUH) are explicitly
forbidden. It not only anguished Muslims, but also most fair-minded
people around the world who agree that liberty and freedom don't vest
in anyone the right to hurt others through their speech. Let
us understand that while free speech is a fundamental human right, it
doesn't trump all other fundamental rights. For example, the law of
defamation is a fetter on free speech and is a sensible effort of
civilized societies to strike a balance between the competing rights to
free speech and privacy. Also, the law doesn't regard hate speech –
that disparages a person or a group on the basis of some identity or
characteristic such as religion, nationality, sex, ethnicity etc. and
incites disorder or violence – as a permissible category of protected
speech. But let us also acknowledge that hate speech, no matter how
abhorrent and contemptible, doesn't justify violence as a retaliatory
measure. The Facebook competition is indefensible by any ethical
or moral yardstick. The Facebook policy allowing individual users to
create hate pages under the garb of individual autonomy and free speech
is not just misconceived but also discriminatory. For example Facebook
doesn't allow pejorative speech against the Jews, and rightly so. But
if anti-Semitism is forbidden, how can bigotry against Muslim and their
revered beliefs be protected in the name of fundamental rights and free
speech? Thus, the relevant question, especially for Pakistanis, was not
whether what Facebook did was right or wrong, but how to respond to
such insensitivity and hypocrisy. But unfortunately this is not how
public debate over the issue has come to be structured in Pakistan. Notwithstanding
the fact that almost everyone in this country has been outraged by the
Facebook competition, (i) the demand of the religious-right that anyone
proposing a response to the offensive Facebook page other than complete
ban of the website is also an apostate liable to be maimed, (ii) the
Lahore High Court's decision adhering to the rightist logic and banning
Facebook altogether, and (iii) the response of the state as a silent
bystander in face of the religious right coercing and intimidating
opponents of overbroad internet censorship in Pakistan, has highlighted
the vulnerability of our fundamental right to free speech, our right to
freedom of information and as well as our right to practice our
religion freely. The Facebook ban has raised some disturbing
questions that must be addressed to take measure of the kind of state
and society we are becoming. On what basis do courts exercise their
jurisdiction, who determines the limits of judicial intervention and
can judges allow personal morality to influence their interpretation of
the law? What is the role of the state in upholding fundamental rights
and striking a balance between competing rights? And how do we recover
from being a society where whoever speaks most virulently against acts
or words deemed sacrilegious and threatens indiscriminate violence
against all dissenters comes to be seen as speaking in the name of God? Reasonable
people can disagree about the efficacy of a strategy or action. But
when did we become complacent about the current state of our collective
life wherein there is no public space for anyone to offer strategies to
protect and defend our religious beliefs if they are different from
those dictated by the most radical elements within our religious
thought? People taking offense to others scandalizing their religious
beliefs is acceptable. But when did we become a community that came to
accept violence as a legitimate manifestation and response to offensive
words or actions of another? If members of the civil society
opposed to an outright ban of Facebook cannot propose alternative
measures, that they perceive as more effective, to counter the Facebook
caricature competition and the company policy and larger social and
legal context that allows such hate speech and sites, during a press
conference at the Karachi Press Club without being exposed to physical
violence, why do we get surprised when the Taliban of Swat decide to
impose their deformed view of Islam through the barrel of the gun, or
Faisal Shehzad attempts to blow up a car and ordinary civilians in
Times Square because he might be opposed to US foreign policy. Is the
common strand of intolerance coupled with violence – in varying degrees
of course – underlying all these situations too hard to discern? And
what role must the state play? Should it stand aside and watch
baton-dangling fanatics claim a monopoly over the understanding of
God's divine message and bully fellow citizens into silence. Should it
intervene when maulvis manhandle a technology-savvy Pakistani who
proposes a forceful Internet campaign to convince the world that the
Facebook caricature competition is wrong, as a preferred alternative to
banning Facebook altogether? Should it intervene when maulvis decide to
function as moral brigades, patrol neighborhoods, and shut down or burn
CD shops? Or should it wait till a group of maulvis organizes itself
into a militia, flog women and slaughter men publicly, and declare that
anyone who is not a Taliban is an infidel? And finally, what is
the legal basis of the orders passed by the Lahore High Court? Under
Article 2A of the Constitution the state is obliged to enable Muslim
citizens of Pakistan to order their lives in accordance with the
teachings and requirements of Islam. Article 20 guarantees the right to
profess, propagate and practice religion. Has Justice Ijaz Ahmad
Chaudhry then found that the ability of anyone within the territory of
Pakistan to voluntarily access hate sites hosted outside the country
contravene the State's obligation to enable Muslims to order their
lives in accordance with the teachings of Islam. And even if so, how is
access to non-hate pages of Facebook disabling Muslims from living
their lives in accordance with Islamic teachings? What about the
right to free speech protected under Article 19 and the newly founded
Constitutional guarantee of freedom of information? Even if one
disagrees with its efficacy, the demand for shutting down Facebook
entirely as a mark of protest in an effort to get the Facebook to
change its policy can be a valid political position. The government can
take such position as a matter of policy. But how can the court dictate
such an order and justify it in law? Aren't all fundamental rights
guaranteed by our Constitution on an even keel? Is the order of the
Lahore High Court not overbroad then? While giving a strained
construction to the right to practice one's religion freely, was the
court not under an obligation to ensure that this right is upheld in
such manner that it imposes minimum fetters on other fundamental rights
such as the right to information and free speech? Further, there is
near jurisprudential consensus that foreign affairs fall outside the
domain of the judicature. On what legal basis did the Lahore High Court
order the Federal Government to lodge "an official and sovereign
protest" with the US government over the Facebook issue? If the
judicature finds itself more qualified to manage all aspects of
national life, should it not start instead by imposing a ban on drone
attacks in an effort to protect right to life? We urgently need
a dispassionate debate over the role of religion in our state and
society. Without acknowledging the elephant in the room, we will fail
to avert our slide into the morass of intolerance and violence. -Babar Sattar (The writer is a lawyer based in Islamabad. Email: sattar@post.harvard.edu)
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NUST research acknowledged
Islamabad: Two research papers by a group of National University of Science and Technology (NUST) students have been
accepted for publication each in an international symposium and a
journal. According to press release, a research paper by three
NUST students working as research assistants in the WisNet lab of the
NUST School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (SEECS) has
been accepted at the International Symposium on Recent Advances in
Intrusion Detection (RAID) 2010. The paper has been co-authored by
Irfanul Haq, Safdar Ali and Hassan Khan and NUST faculty member Dr Ali
Khayam. RAID is considered as one of the most competitive
conferences in the general security area, particularly in the area of
intrusion detection. Another paper by Sardar Ali, Irfanul Haq, Sajjad,
Anam and Naurin, working in the same WisNet lab has also been accepted
by the ACM Computer Communication Review (CCR) Journal. Daily times
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