PAKISTAN BANS MOBILE PHONE
PACKAGESON’MORAL GROUNDS
“Stop all kinds of chat packages (voice and SMS) irrespective of
‘time of the day’ and submit compliance by September 2 positively,” said the
directive signed by PTA Director General Muhammad Talib Dogar.A PTA official
said: “We had sent the telecom companies a letter in November 2012 to comply
with our directions but they have still not complied and are offering these
packages.”Leaders of hardline groups and parliamentarians from religious
parties and the ruling PML-N had demanded that the government should ban such
mobile phone packages as young boys and girls were using them to indulge in
“immoral” activities.Speaking in the Punjab Assembly recently, PML-N legislator
Sheikh Allauddin said: “Boys and girls talk the whole night on mobile phones
and these packages are destroying the moral character of our youth.”
The packages also came under fire in the National Assembly or
lower house of parliament, with some lawmakers claiming they were against the
moral values of Pakistani society.On the other hand, cellular companies such as
Mobilink, Ufone, Zong, Telenor and Warid have reacted strongly to the PTA’s
directive and said the ban on packages provided during the day is beyond their
comprehension.A large number of people are availing of packages that allow them
to call a selected number of friends and relatives at lower rates, officials of
the mobile companies said.“One wonders how these are contrary to the moral
values of our society. On the demand of extremists, night and day mobile
packages are banned. YouTube is already banned,” said an official of a cellular
company who did not want to be named.“These extremists may demand a ban on
Facebook and social media as well, as these are also considered by many in our
society as instrumental to spreading obscenity,” he said.Pakistan’s telecom
industry is one of the most profitable in the world. In the past five years,
the country has witnessed a boom in the cellular industry with the number of
mobile phone users increasing dramatically.A senior official of a telecom
company said the PTA’s decision is likely to further strain an industry already
burdened with heavy taxation.
Prof. John Kurakar
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