Fatwa is been used to prohibit (Haram) anti-Islam movies and etc. (Fatwa: Islamic legal pronouncement)

New Delhi (Sputnik): The Bollywood movie “Gul Makai”, based on the story of the life and struggle of 22-year-old Pakistani Nobel Peace Prize laureate Malala Yousafzai, has drawn the ire of a Muslim cleric.
A Muslim cleric from the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh has issued a fatwa, an Islamic legal decree, against Amjad Khan, the director of a film about Pakistani Nobel laureate Malala Yousafzai, who was shot by Taliban militants at the age of 14.
A poster for the film “Gul Makai” shows a girl holding a burning book in her hands with an explosion coming out of it. The cleric alleged that the book in question is the Quran, which means, per him, that the poster is against Islam and that the movie is showing their holy text as well as their religion in a "bad light".
“Darul Ifta Jama Masjid Mufti issues a fatwa against H.E Amjad Khan, the director of the Bollywood movie Gul Makai. The poster of the movie shows a girl holding a book and the book is Quran, hence it is against Islam and showing their religion in bad light”, a letter issued by the Mosque read.
Don’t think Gul Makai will get any hatred: director Amjad Khan on Malala Yousafzai biopic https://thesecularnews.com/dont-think-gul-makai-will-get-any-hatred-director-amjad-khan-on-malala-yousafzai-biopic/ 
 

Speaking to Sputnik, the director of the film rubbished reports of filing any police complaint, saying:
“The cleric is the victim of misconception. He is a religious scholar, he is thinking that the lead actress, who is depicting Malala in the film, is holding a Quran in her hands. He is assuming that because of his prejudice and because the protagonist of the film is a Muslim, she will only hold the Quran. The film is about girls child education, he is unable to understand this. This is not a dignified move, but I will try to talk to him and will send him a letter", he added.
Khan denied taking any legal action against the cleric as he doesn’t want him to land in legal trouble.
The movie, slated for release on 31 January, tells the story of Malala Yousafzai, a 22-year-old woman who became the youngest recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize for campaigning for girls' education rights in 2014.
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"Islam is perfect and its arguments are conclusive." We all grew up believing this shit. There are tons of heavily edited videos that are mostly Dawah arguing with less informed Westerns. Many times the video ends giving the other person no chance to respond.

But then why do we ban so many websites that challenge Islam? What are we afraid of? Why do we ban books, atheists books, YouTube Channels, even this page is banned in Pakistan, when we have the perfect faith and response to anything (apparently not!!).

The desired effect is that most of our compatriots are living in an artificial bubble. They believe Islam is perfect. We all but love see them come here when they are outside the country to burst their bubble.

They come with so much confidence that they can beat any argument by comparing it to Christianity... Boom we burst that. They cannot respond to carefully sourced and presented facts, so they resort to insults and accusing us of being secret Hindus, argue with them in Arabic instantly... Boom burst that bubble.... They cannot get their heads around it. So eventually they start finally reading what we have to say. What remains is two things. Will they use that brain or not? Is it blind faith or not?

Next is how far Pakistan went to block the outside world. Same can be said to nearly every Islamic country.

YouTube was blocked in Pakistan following a decision taken by the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority on 22 February 2008 because of the number of "non-Islamic objectionable videos."[17][18] One report specifically named Fitna, a controversial Dutch film, as the basis for the block.[19] Pakistan, an Islamic republic, ordered its ISPs to block access to YouTube "for containing blasphemous web content/movies."[20] The action effectively blocked YouTube access worldwide for several hours on 24 February.[21] Defaming Muhammad under § 295-C of the Blasphemy law in Pakistan requires a death sentence.[22] This followed increasing unrest in Pakistan by over the reprinting of the Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons which depict satirical criticism of Islam.[20] Router misconfiguration by one Pakistani ISP on 24 February 2008 effectively blocked YouTube access worldwide for several hours.[21] On 26 February 2008, the ban was lifted after the website had removed the objectionable content from its servers at the demand of the Government of Pakistan.[16]

On 19 and 20 May 2010, Pakistan's Telecommunication Authority PTA imposed a ban on Wikipedia, YouTube, Flickr, and Facebook in response to a competition entitled Everybody Draw Mohammed Day on Facebook, in a bid to contain "blasphemous" material[23][24] The ban imposed on Facebook was the result of a ruling by the Lahore High Court, while the ban on the other websites was imposed arbitrarily by the PTA on the grounds of "objectionable content", a different response from earlier requests, such as pages created to promote peaceful demonstrations in Pakistani cities being removed because they were "inciting violence". The ban was lifted on 27 May 2010, after the website removed the objectionable content from its servers at the Demand of the government. However, individual videos deemed offensive to Muslims that are posted on YouTube will continue to be blocked.[25][26]

In September 2012, the PTA blocked the video-sharing website YouTube for not removing an anti-Islamic film made in the United States, Innocence of Muslims, which mocks Mohammed. The website would remain suspended, it was stated, until the film was removed.[27][28] In a related move, the PTA announced that it had blocked about 20,000 websites due to "objectionable" content.[29]

On 25 July 2013, the government announced that it is mulling over reopening YouTube during the second week of August. A special 12-member committee was working under the Minister of IT and Telecommunication, Anusha Rahman, to see if objectionable content can be removed. The Pakistan Telecommunications Authority, the telecom watchdog in the country, has already expressed its inability to filter out select content.[30]

On 21 April 2014, Pakistan's Senate Standing Committee on Human Rights requested the Federal Government remove the ban on YouTube.[31][32]

On 8 February 2015, the government announced that YouTube will remain blocked 'indefinitely' because no tool or solution had been found which can totally block offensive content.[33] As of June 2015 — 1,000 days on — the ban was still in effect, and YouTube cannot be accessed from either desktop or mobile devices.[32]

The ban was lifted due to technical glitch on December 6, 2015 according to ISPs in Pakistan.[34] As September 2016, the ban has been lifted officially, as YouTube launched a local version for Pakistan.[35]

On 25 November 2017, the NetBlocks internet shutdown observatory and Digital Rights Foundation identified mass-scale blocking of social media and content-sharing websites including YouTube, Twitter and Facebook throughout Pakistan imposed by the government in response to the violent Tehreek-e-Labaik protests.[36][37][38] The technical investigation found that all major Pakistani fixed-line and mobile service providers were affected by the restrictions, which were lifted by the PTA the next day when protests abated following the resignation of Minister for Law and Justice Zahid Hamid.[39]

In 2019, The National Assembly Standing Committee on Information Technology and Telecom was informed by Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) that 900,000 URLs were blocked in Pakistan for "reasons such as carrying blasphemous and pornographic content and/or sentiments against the state, judiciary or the armed forces."[40]

More found https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_censorship_in_Pakistan











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