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Trouble in the making? | Dialogue | thenews com pk

April 18, 2021 A proposed bill criminalising “criticism” and “ridicule” of the Armed Forces has raised fears that it would further shrink the space for free speech and expression “No one can ridicule the national ‘institutions’ any longer” Amjad Ali Khan, a member of National Assembly from the ruling Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) wrote on his Twitter timeline on September 15, after tabling a private bill in the National Assembly suggesting a prison sentence and fine for those who “ridicule” the armed forces of Pakistan. The purpose of the “The Criminal Law (Amendment) Bill 2020” is “to prevent hatred and disrespectful behaviour against the Armed Forces. Strict action should be taken against those bringing disrepute to the Armed Forces institution in accordance with the law”.

Pakistan s new law criminalises military criticism with 2-yr jail term, sparks outrage

Text Size: A+ New Delhi: The Pakistani government has proposed a law that will criminalise the criticism of the military, which has been approved by a panel of the National Assembly the lower house of the country’s parliament. The bill, which was approved by Pakistan’s National Assembly Standing Committee on Interior on 7 April, proposes to change the country’s criminal law and states that anyone who “intentionally ridicules, brings into disrepute or defames” the country’s military will undergo a two-year prison sentence or will be fined more than $3,200 (Rs 5,00,000) or both. The bill, however, still needs majority approval in the National Assembly and the Senate (upper house) of the country’s Parliament.

Mayoral election: Key questions Sadiq Khan faces on London s violent crime problem

Mayoral election: Key questions Sadiq Khan faces on London’s violent crime problem Martin Bentham UP NEXT That’s already more than half the 15 who were killed in similar manner in 2020 and a rate of killing that, if continued, will take this year’s total well past the 26 teenage homicides of 2019. They’re depressing figures, and although murder rates are not the only measure of Sadiq Khan’s success or failure in his job of making London a safer place, they’re also not the only disappointing statistics from his time. Knife crime overall for example has been at or near record levels for much of his mayoralty with around 15,000 offences per year, until a slight dip since the Covid lockdowns helped bring street crime down.

Law student, 18, died after being stabbed during designer clothes robbery, court hears

Law student, 18, died after being stabbed during designer clothes robbery, court hears
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