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YouTube Launches Pakistani Version

by AFP
Banaras Khan—AFP

Banaras Khan—AFP

New domain paves the way for three-year ban to be lifted.

Google has launched a localized version of YouTube in Pakistan, potentially paving the way for the country’s top court to lift a ban on the site over “blasphemous content.”

The site was blocked after Innocence of Muslims, a blasphemous American-made film about Islam’s Prophet that triggered protests across the Muslim world including in Pakistan, was uploaded onto the site. Over 20 people across Pakistan died in protests against the film.

Google said Tuesday users in Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka would see a new YouTube homepage featuring local content in native languages.

YouTube, owned by California-based Google, has already launched similar initiatives in dozens of other countries.

The Supreme Court’s ban, in place since September 2012, applied to YouTube’s global and localized sites. The new site, youtube.com.pk, is currently live but inaccessible inside Pakistan, and the government and Google hope its creation will mean the Supreme Court will lift the ban, even if only partially.

Content on the local site can still be regulated, and a senior government official said on Wednesday Pakistan’s telecommunication authority could ask Google to remove content it deems objectionable. If Google complies, it could meet a condition set by the Supreme Court for lifting the ban.

“The understanding is that on the localized version offensive and blasphemous content could be blocked by Google on the government’s request,” the official said.

A Google spokesman confirmed that governments are allowed to request the removal of YouTube videos that violate local laws. “We have clear community guidelines, and when videos violate those rules, we remove them,” the spokesman said.

But the Internet giant said it would review requests before taking videos down. “Government requests to remove content will continue to be tracked and included in our Transparency Report.”

Islamabad has been in intermittent talks with Google for several years over the issue, another source close to the matter said, without providing a specific timeframe for the unveiling of YouTube Pakistan. “We are in a very near-term sort of thing. The roadblocks have been removed,” the source said.

A Supreme Court official meanwhile said the next court hearing about the ban is in two weeks.

Users in Pakistan continue to access YouTube using proxy servers and Virtual Private Networks.

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1 comment

Imran Ahmed January 13, 2016 - 10:48 pm

Unlike most courts around the world our SC is condoning censorship

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