Flood of Misinformation Clouds India-Pakistan Tensions
May 9, 2025Pakistan launches cyber offensive, hacks indian state portals
May 10, 2025An Islamabad court has handed down three additional death sentences in cyber blasphemy cases under the Prevention of Electronic Crimes Act (PECA), bringing the total to 11 since September 2024.
The verdicts come amid mounting concerns over alleged entrapment, manipulated evidence, and collusion between FIA officials and a group known as the “Legal Commission on Blasphemy Pakistan.”
According to a leaked Punjab Special Branch report, dozens may have been falsely accused in what it called the “Blasphemy Business.” Families of 101 accused have petitioned the Islamabad High Court for an independent inquiry.
Defense lawyers criticized the trials as biased and lacking procedural fairness, alleging the same pattern of evidence and charges in multiple cases.
One defense lawyer said his client, a university student, was lured with a fake job offer before being arrested. Another said his client had performed Umrah shortly before being accused.
The complainant admitted to using a fake Facebook profile and could not recall key details about the case.
Human rights groups warn the expanding use of PECA for blasphemy prosecutions poses grave risks to freedom of expression and due process in Pakistan’s digital space.
