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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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June 21, 2019
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Pakistan
Presses U.N. to Crack Down on Anti-Islamic Speech
by John Rossomando
IPT News
June 21, 2019
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Pakistan wants the United Nations' help cracking down on what it
considers Islamophobia and hate speech around the globe.
Islamophobia "is today the most prevalent expression of racism and
hatred against 'the other'," Pakistan's U.N. Ambassador Maleeha Lodhi said Wednesday during a Security Council meeting on a
hate speech proposal.
Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan has been a staunch defender of his country's blasphemy laws. Last
year, he defended laws mandating death for those who offend the
Prophet Muhammad by "imputation, insinuation or innuendo."
Earlier this month, Khan urged the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) to play a
role safeguarding the religious sentiments of Muslims.
"It was up to us to explain to the western people the amount of
pain they cause us when they ridicule or mock our Holy Prophet," Khan said at the OIC's 14th Islamic Summit in Mecca. "I
would like to say from this platform that in the forums like the United
Nations and the forums like the European Union, we must explain to them
that they cannot hurt the sentiments of 1.3 billion people under the garb
of freedom of expression."
Terrorism is about political struggle, not religion, he argued, and
equating Islam with terrorism does a disservice to the world's Muslims and
fuels massacres such as the March attack at a mosque in Christchurch, New Zealand.
The OIC unsuccessfully sought the U.N.'s support for a global Islamophobia ban
in 2014. The OIC's 57 members represent the U.N.'s largest voting bloc.
"As new channels for hate speech are reaching wider audiences than
ever at lightning speed, we all – the United Nations, governments,
technology companies, educational institutions – need to step up our
response," said U.N. Secretary General Antonio Gutierrez at
Wednesday's Security Council session. "While digital technology has
provided new areas in which hate speech can thrive, it can also help to
monitor activity, target our response and build support for
counter-narratives."
He announced plans for a conference on the role of
education in addressing hate speech. Gutierrez didn't discuss what would
happen after that, but it could lead to a U.N. proposal regulating hate
speech and Islamophobia worldwide.
Lodhi endorsed the secretary general's desire to tackle the issue of
hate speech even though what the U.N. would actually do remains undefined.
"We are fully committed to support the UN's strategy on hate
speech. This is a moment for all of us to come together to reverse the tide
of hate and bigotry that threatens to undermine social solidarity and
peaceful co-existence," Lodhi said.
The United States opposes any idea of the kind, invoking the U.S.
Constitution and saying "speech restrictions do not work. Instead,
they constrain democratic engagement, diminish respect for human dignity,
and stifle change and social advancement."
Among other things, the strategy calls on U.N. entities to "engage private sector
actors, including social media companies, on steps they can take to support
UN principles and action to address and counter hate speech, encouraging
partnerships between government, industry and civil society."
Thus far, Twitter has shown a willingness to voluntarily enforce
Pakistan's Islamic blasphemy rules even if the U.S. government doesn't
abide by any potential hate speech treaty that could stem from the planned
conference. This raises the possibility that it and other social media
companies might voluntarily follow suggestions from U.N. bureaucrats to the
detriment of free speech.
Pakistan has tried to compel social media platforms to impose its
blasphemy laws internationally. Twitter's legal department sent American
writers Michelle Malkin
and FrontPageMag.com's Jamie Glazov notices that their posts violated
Pakistani law.
Censoring free thought and expression is a problem when countries like
Pakistan, Iran and Saudi Arabia do it to their own people. But it is even
worse to allow them to impose their will beyond their borders. Social media
platforms should stand by the principles of liberty that have allowed them
to thrive. Yielding to Islamist censorship is disappointing and dangerous.
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