Norwegian
BANNED
- Joined
- Aug 19, 2014
- Messages
- 19,001
- Reaction score
- 11
- Country
- Location
Internet cafes in all major and small cities, particularly in towns and villages, are involved in providing children easy access to objectionable sites without any check by relevant authorities. STOCK IMAGE
ISLAMABAD: Despite a strong recommendation by the Unicef, provincial governments in Pakistan have not been able to promulgate laws to protect children from child p0rnography, said an official of the federal Ombudsman’s office for Children’s Complaints.
Legislation on the issue becomes legal obligation of the provincial governments following the passage of the 18th constitutional amendment in 2010. Child protection was under the Ministry of Social Welfare before the amendment.
Unicef, in its annual report of 2010, while expressing serious concern over the easy access of p0rnographic and gambling sites by children in internet cafes, had asked the Ministry of Social Welfare, Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) and Ministry of Information Technology to check the unregulated internet cafes.
Terming easy access to the internet as an encouraging activity, the Unicef report said that the lack of a regulatory mechanism to monitor internet cafes is disturbing. Experts say that it is the responsibility of the provincial governments to protect the children from abuse and exploitation in many internet cafes who were also producing child p0rnography. Internet cafes in all major and small cities, particularly in towns and villages, are involved in providing children easy access to objectionable sites without any check by relevant authorities.
According to the official, the provincial governments had promised to initiate the process for the required legislation but no progress was reported by any of the four provinces till this year. “It is obligatory for Pakistan, being a signatory of United Nations Convention of Child’s Right, to promulgate laws to make internet cafes accountable,” he said.
Due to the devolution of the Ministry of Social Welfare after the 18th constitutional amendment, it has become difficult for the federal government to push the provinces regarding the required legislation, he added.
The official expected that the PTA would take appropriate steps to censor the child p0rnography till the promulgation of the required laws. However, laws are necessary to apprehend and prosecute the culprits in internet cafes, he emphasized.
Anwarul Haq Kakar, a prominent leader of Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) Balochistan, was of the view that the federal government should introduce the required laws without waiting for such legislations by the provincial government. “A public awareness campaign must be launched by the federal and provincial governments before enacting the laws,” he told The Express Tribune. “Such campaign will not only educate parents, teachers and legislators about the negative impact of this dirty business, but will also help expose the people involved in this trade,” he added.
Published in The Express Tribune, February 16th, 2015.
When I was in Pakistan, last month, I could see lots of street kids wandering freely in internet-cafes across the country! Without any government or state-body overseeing net-cafes, its not surprising how internet p0rnography is destroying moral fabric of our society from within!
@Tridibans @wolfschanzze @DRAY @narcon @madooxno9 @danish_vij @FaujHistorian @1000 @FNFAL @gau8av @ROCKING @abhi21 @naveen mishra @Marxist @Kunwar Anurag Rathore @AgNoStiC MuSliM @Krate M @LeveragedBuyout @MastanKhan @Agent Smith @shuntmaster @Akheilos @dexter @Slav Defence @sur @XenoEnsi-14 @TankMan @DESERT FIGHTER @p100 @BDforever @hunter_hunted @Mav3rick @rockstar08 @asad71 @Major Sam @pursuit of happiness @Faizan Memon @Spy Master @ozzy22 @Manticore @war khan @ShowGun @Afridistan @Razia Sultana @madmusti @farhan_9909 @ghazaliy2k @KingMamba @Khalid Newazi