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Obama calls on Americans to support sanctions against Russia despite 'economic consequences'

SUMMER MEZA

  Former President Barack Obama was one of many prominent U.S. politicians to comment on Russia's invasion of Ukraine on Thursday, saying it "threatens the foundation of the international order" and offering his perspective on what Americans should do moving forward.


The former president first condemned Moscow's "brutal" attack, despairing at the death and destruction that would leave "untold numbers" of displaced Ukrainians. 

He then called on Americans to denounce Russia's actions and put aside political differences to "support President Biden's efforts ... to impose hard hitting sanctions on Russia."

"There may be some economic consequences to such sanctions, given Russia's significant role in global energy markets," Obama continued. "But that's a price we should be willing to pay to take a stand on the side of freedom."

See his full statement below.

https://theweek.com/barack-obama/1010600/obama-calls-on-americans-to-support-sanctions-against-russia-despite-economic

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Pakistan's tough stance on 'fake news' threatens basic freedoms

WALEED TARIQ
Draconian measure meant to tackle rampant disinformation on social media.
Pakistan moved over the weekend to tighten up a controversial cybercrime law in order ostensibly to tackle fake news on social media, but media organizations and rights activists said it could target opposition critics and stifle freedom of speech.
The Pakistan Electronic Crimes Act 2016 (PECA) was amended using a presidential ordinance. The law already criminalized certain kinds of speech including "offenses against the dignity of a natural person." With the amendment, someone accused of defaming a person or institution -- such as the army or the judiciary -- could be denied bail and be jailed for up to five years instead of three. The accused must be tried within six months, and the offense has also been made cognizable, enabling police to make an arrest without a warrant.
Addressing a press conference in Karachi on Sunday, Law Minister Farogh Naseem said the amendment is meant to deal with "fake news." Naseem said the amendment was made following consultations with Prime Minister Imran Khan, Information Minister Fawad Chaudhry and Attorney General Khalid Jawed Khan.
"It is your constitutional right to criticize but please do not indulge in spreading fake news," said Naseem. He said fake news is spread by those who have a personal agenda or are funded by external agents in foreign countries. The minister brushed off criticism that the ordinance is a mechanism to bypass parliament. "An ordinance is not unconstitutional or undemocratic," he said. "By approving an ordinance one also gets to know the pitfalls in the law, which can be corrected through amendments when it is laid in the parliament."
Disinformation is rampant on Pakistani social media where hordes of trolls -- some of whom are alleged to have ruling party support -- run smear campaigns against opponents, critical journalists -- especially female ones -- and minorities. Rizwan Saeed, a doctoral researcher at Ohio University who recently contributed the chapter on Pakistan in the Routledge Handbook of Autocratization in South Asia, told Nikkei Asia that allowing any individual to file a report of defamation of an institution and then becoming a party in the case is "problematic."
"How can an individual assess what damage has been done to the targeted institution?" Saeed asked. He said that adding denial of bail and arrest without a warrant are "coercive measures to threaten citizens, and one more step towards digital autocratization."
Saeed said the absence of an exact definition of fake news will also leave citizens vulnerable to the interpretations and mercies of law enforcement personnel.
"The state can use this lack of clarity to silence dissenting voices and suppress individuals' digital liberties," he said. He cited the recent example of a provincial minister in Punjab asking the Federal Investigation Agency to take action against those who spread "fake news" about Lahore's deplorable air quality, which has risen to hazardous levels.
The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan called the legislation "undemocratic," and expressed concern that it will be used to clamp down on critics of the government and state institutions. The independent non-profit organization said in statement that the government should be accountable to citizens, and called for the ordinance to be "rolled back immediately."
Journalists and media related organizations have severely criticized the ordinance. "Imran Khan wants to enforce the Chinese model in Pakistan," Hamid Mir, a senior journalist, told Nikkei. He said the law infringes on the spirit of the constitution and many past court verdicts, and needs to be quashed.
Khan, who came to power in 2018, has been included on Reporters Without Borders' 2021 list of "press freedom predators."
A joint action committee that includes the All Pakistan Newspapers Society and the Council of Pakistan Newspaper Editors issued a similar statement and rejected the "draconian amendments." The committee pledged to take "any and all" legal action to challenge state efforts to curb media independence. On Monday, it walked out of a meeting with the information ministry, and announced that all discussions were being suspended until the amendments are reversed.
Last year, the government moved to form the Pakistan Media Development Authority -- a centralized body to oversee print, electronic and digital media. The idea was firmly rejected by all stakeholders.
Freedom Network, a Pakistani media and development sector watchdog, said the decree is meant to inhibit public scrutiny of elected representatives and state institutions. In a statement, it called on the government to withdraw the amendment and "let citizens express themselves without fears of being penalized." In its annual 2021 report, the organization said at least two dozen journalists have been issued PECA notices in the last three years, and half of them were formally charged. Members of the opposition also voiced concern. They included Shehbaz Sharif, president of the conservative Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz), which passed the law six years ago. He tweeted that the ordinance "shows the real fascist face of the ruling clique." Yousuf Raza Gilani, leader of opposition in the upper house of parliament, said they will challenge the amendments in court. In recent weeks the government has come under increasing criticism over rising commodity and fuel prices, natural gas shortages and deteriorating law and order.
Activists had already warned of a further clampdown after last week's arrest of Mohsin Baig, a critical former media adviser to the prime minister, under cybercrime laws on the request of a federal minister. Baig was accused of defaming Murad Saeed -- a politician belonging to the Khan's Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party -- on a TV talk show. He has also been charged under anti-terrorism laws for resisting arrest by plainclothes officers.
Saeed said rooting out misinformation is only possible with "concerted and collective efforts" of social media companies, governments, news agencies and media outlets.
https://asia.nikkei.com/Politics/Pakistan-s-tough-stance-on-fake-news-threatens-basic-freedoms

Fresh clashes on Pakistan-Afghanistan border kill two, wound several

By Gul Yousafzai
Clashes between Afghan and Pakistani security forces have killed two people and wounded several in a border region of the two neighbours, officials said, the latest in a series of such skirmishes.
The forces started exchanging fire in a dispute over the setting up of a military check post in a southwestern border area that divides Chaman and Spin Boldak districts, three security officials told Reuters.
Both sides blamed each other for starting the clashes that later spread to several nearby villages.
"It is regrettable that the Pakistani security officials first opened the fire," Afghan Taliban government spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said in a tweet.Two civilians were killed and 22 wounded on Afghan side, a local Taliban spokesman Mohammad Asif Hakimi said. Five Taliban soldiers were also wounded, he said."Afghans made the first move and opened unprovoked fire on Pakistani troops when they asked Afghan soldiers to stop work on a post located on Pakistani side," a Pakistani security official said.
Pakistani officials said several wounded included four security officials.
It is difficult to independently verify claims in the border region, which is off limits to journalists.
Pakistan's army, which didn't respond to a request for comment, has stepped up security operations along the Afghan border in recent weeks after a spate of militant attacks. read more
Islamist and separatist factions have killed at least 14 Pakistani soldiers in attacks over the past month, three of them carried out by fighters entering from Afghanistan.
The Taliban have denied Afghan territory was used to stage the attacks.
Despite such assurances, disputes linked to the border have been a bone of contention between the neighbours for decades. The Taliban have attempted to block Pakistan's plans to finish fencing the 2,600 km (1,615 mile) border that was drawn by British colonial rulers with no consideration for the Pashtun tribes it divided.
It has never been recognised by any Afghan government.
https://www.reuters.com/world/fresh-clashes-pakistan-afghanistan-border-kill-two-wound-several-2022-02-25/

"Nuclear Nation, Begging For Decades": Anger In Pakistan Over Loans

 

Public confidence in the government is at a new low due to financial mismanagement and over-dependence on foreign funds to run the country, 'Islam Khabar' claimed.

Amid the release of a fresh tranche of loans from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the Pakistani government is facing backlash from civil society, over the unending series of loans, a report said on Thursday.

Public confidence in the government is at a new low due to financial mismanagement and over-dependence on foreign funds to run the country, 'Islam Khabar' claimed.

Angry reactions followed a tweet by Pakistan's Finance Minister Shaukat Tarin announcing the approval of the 6th tranche of IMF loans.

"I am pleased to announce that IMF Board has approved 6th tranche of their programme for Pakistan," Tarin tweeted.

"It is not only surprising but also regrettable that the Finance Minister, by enslaving the nation, expressed happiness over the receipt of a new installment from the IMF," the report noted.

A media editorial in Pakistan underlined that Pakistan is "probably the only nuclear country whose daily affairs require loans, begging for aid and this has continued for decades."

The backlash followed IMF's release of USD 1 billion to Pakistan, subject to fulfilling certain conditions. Fuel prices and power tariffs in Pakistan are at historic highs as a result.

The fresh funds constitute an installment of a USD 6 billion bailout package. IMF's Executive Board had cleared the bailout package for Pakistan on July 3, 2019.

"Pakistan remains vulnerable to possible flare-ups of the pandemic, tighter international financial conditions, a rise in geopolitical tensions, as well as delayed implementation of structural reforms," the IMF noted in a staff report prepared for the executive board.

https://www.ndtv.com/world-news/anger-in-pakistan-over-loans-nuclear-nation-begging-for-decades-2788488

پاکستان پیپلز پارٹی کے چیئرمین بلاول بھٹو زرداری سے ملکی میڈیا کی جوائنٹ ایکشن کمیٹی کے عہدیداروں کی ملاقات

کراچی (25 فروری 2022) پاکستان پیپلز پارٹی کے چیئرمین بلاول بھٹو زرداری سے ملکی میڈیا کی جوائنٹ ایکشن کمیٹی کے عہدیداروں نے ملاقات کی اور انہیں پی ٹی آئی حکومت کی جانب سے سوشل و الیکٹرانک سمیت تمام میڈیا کو دبانے کے لیے پریوینشن آف الیکٹرک کرائمز ایکٹ (پیکا) جیسے کالے قانون اور اس جیسے دیگر قوانین جو شہریوں کی اظہار رائے کی آزادی کے بنیادی حق پر قدغنیں لگاتے


ہیں کے متعلق اپنے تحفظات سے آگاہ کیا ہے۔ 

پی پی پی چیئرمین نے وفد کو یقین دہانی کرائی کہ ان کی جماعت اپنے منشور کے مطابق آزادی صحافت کی ہر شکل اور مواد کی حمایت پر قائم رہے گی۔

 انہوں نے اپنی پارٹی کی ٹیم کو ہدایت کی کہ وہ عدالتوں کے ساتھ ساتھ سیاسی، پارلیمانی اور سماجی سطح پر ہر فورم پر مذکورہ قوانین کو چیلنج کرے۔ 

چیئرمین بلاول بھٹو زرداری نے جوائنٹ ایکشن کمیٹی کو اپنی غیر متزلزل حمایت کے ساتھ ساتھ اپنی پارٹی کی جانب سے بھی پاکستانی عوام کے ناقابل تنسیخ بنیادی، آئینی اور جمہوری حقوق کے لیے کی جانے والی مشترکہ لڑائی میں مکمل یکجہتی کا یقین دلایا۔ 

وفد میں سی پی این ای، اے پی این ایس، اے ای ایم ای این ڈی، اور پی بی اے کے سینئر نمائندے شامل تھے۔ اجلاس میں سرمد علی، ناز افرین سہگل، ڈاکٹر جبار خٹک، طاہر اے خان، شکیل مسعود، شہاب زبیری، اطہر قاضی، زاہد مظہر، اعجاز الحق، عامر محمود، حافظ طارق اور شہاب محمود نے شرکت کی۔ اس موقعے پر پاکستان پیپلز پارٹی کے رہنما شیری رحمان، شازیہ مری اور فیصل کریم کنڈی بھی موجود تھے۔

https://www.ppp.org.pk/pr/26343/