<p>A state-imposed social media blackout to quell massive protests around the arrest of Pakistan's former Prime Minister Imran Khan has instead fuelled momentum for him, analysts say.</p>.<p>Moments after Khan was detained by a swarm of paramilitary Rangers on Tuesday, the interior ministry restricted nationwide access to Twitter, Facebook and YouTube.</p>.<p>Mobile data coverage -- used by political activists to organise protests on messenger apps such as WhatsApp, but with far larger effects on the wider populace -- was also cut.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/islamabad-high-court-grants-two-week-bail-to-imran-khan-in-corruption-case-1218099.html" target="_blank">Islamabad High Court grants two-week bail to Imran Khan in corruption case</a></strong></p>.<p>But Khan's supporters quickly found workarounds, leaving social media awash with calls for protest and shaky handheld clips of thousands of demonstrators clashing with police.</p>.<p>The move was a "crass miscalculation" by authorities, according to Shahzad Ahmad, director of digital rights organisation Bytes for All. "It's only going to work against them."</p>.<p>Leading his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party in opposition, Khan remains staggeringly popular and has crafted a campaign accusing the parties and army of colluding to keep him out of power, lock him up and even assassinate him.</p>.<p>Blocking social media only fuels the PTI's argument, said digital rights activist Usama Khilji.</p>.<p>"It's adding to their popularity because it's being seen as a move to curtail basic rights of citizens."</p>.<p>On Thursday, the Supreme Court declared Khan's arrest invalid, but the political turmoil has continued, and the internet restrictions remain in place.</p>.<p>Ahmad said the authorities who ordered the ban are "dinosaurs" who "do not have an idea how rapidly things are changing".</p>.<p>"They think in the mindset of absolute power," he said.</p>.<p>But internet and social media use has exploded in Pakistan in recent years, fuelled by the widespread availability of cheap smartphones.</p>.<p>Mobile broadband subscribers jumped from 56 million in 2018 to 116 million in 2022 -- around half of the country -- according to the telecom regulator.</p>.<p>Internet censorship has been common in recent decades, even under Khan's government.</p>.<p>But a young, tech-savvy citizenry has adapted quickly, using Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) to disguise their locations and skirt restrictions, Ahmad said.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/pak-president-alvi-holds-hours-long-meeting-with-imran-khan-1218045.html" target="_blank">Pak President Alvi holds hours-long meeting with Imran Khan</a></strong></p>.<p>Despite the ban, Twitter "was still very active in the country because people had their VPNs ready," he added.</p>.<p>The mobile data outage, however, cannot be circumvented in that way.</p>.<p>In Peshawar, PTI supporter Ikram Khan told <em>AFP </em>that party activists were expecting "a complete (internet) shutdown", so they hurriedly transferred mobile phone clips to computers equipped with wired internet connections and VPNs.</p>.<p>There was a delay in uploading the videos to Instagram and Twitter, and streaming service Facebook Live could not be used, but "we still did our job well", the 31-year-old told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>"We know how to handle the situation."</p>.<p>The internet shutdown has triggered international condemnation.</p>.<p>Amnesty International Pakistan campaigner Rimmel Mohydin told <em>AFP </em>it was "a clear human rights violation".</p>.<p>It can "facilitate further violations of human rights, including impeding the documentation of unlawful use of force," she said.</p>.<p>Such remarks give credence to PTI claims they are being silenced, according to analyst Hasan Askari.</p>.<p>"The international concern definitely goes in their favour," he said.</p>.<p>Khan came to power in 2018 marketing himself as a political outsider, riding a pioneering wave of social media enthusiasm to challenge the country's two main dynastic parties, who between them have ruled Pakistan for decades.</p>.<p>Last April, after having lost the key support of Pakistan's powerful military -- which has itself ruled the country directly for more than three decades -- he was ousted in a no-confidence vote.</p>.<p>The ensuing political chaos has exacerbated an economic downturn that has seen decades-high inflation, the rupee tumbling to a record low Thursday, and deadlocked bailout negotiations with the International Monetary Fund.</p>.<p>The latest internet outage has added to those woes, costing Pakistan as much as $53 million a day according to global internet monitor NetBlocks, with mobile data coverage powering economic transactions, including credit and debit card point-of-sale terminals.</p>.<p>A shaky coalition government now faces the prospect of an electorate galvanised by simultaneous political and economic crises ahead of elections due no later than October.</p>.<p>The blackout "is quite disproportionate" said Khilji. "It does show a panic where the state is sort of caught off guard and it seems like they didn't really plan this well.</p>.<p>"The biggest issue is that people are already frustrated with the economic situation and this just adds on top of that," he said.</p>.<p>"It's giving more of a reason for citizens to be unhappy with the current government."</p>
<p>A state-imposed social media blackout to quell massive protests around the arrest of Pakistan's former Prime Minister Imran Khan has instead fuelled momentum for him, analysts say.</p>.<p>Moments after Khan was detained by a swarm of paramilitary Rangers on Tuesday, the interior ministry restricted nationwide access to Twitter, Facebook and YouTube.</p>.<p>Mobile data coverage -- used by political activists to organise protests on messenger apps such as WhatsApp, but with far larger effects on the wider populace -- was also cut.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/islamabad-high-court-grants-two-week-bail-to-imran-khan-in-corruption-case-1218099.html" target="_blank">Islamabad High Court grants two-week bail to Imran Khan in corruption case</a></strong></p>.<p>But Khan's supporters quickly found workarounds, leaving social media awash with calls for protest and shaky handheld clips of thousands of demonstrators clashing with police.</p>.<p>The move was a "crass miscalculation" by authorities, according to Shahzad Ahmad, director of digital rights organisation Bytes for All. "It's only going to work against them."</p>.<p>Leading his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party in opposition, Khan remains staggeringly popular and has crafted a campaign accusing the parties and army of colluding to keep him out of power, lock him up and even assassinate him.</p>.<p>Blocking social media only fuels the PTI's argument, said digital rights activist Usama Khilji.</p>.<p>"It's adding to their popularity because it's being seen as a move to curtail basic rights of citizens."</p>.<p>On Thursday, the Supreme Court declared Khan's arrest invalid, but the political turmoil has continued, and the internet restrictions remain in place.</p>.<p>Ahmad said the authorities who ordered the ban are "dinosaurs" who "do not have an idea how rapidly things are changing".</p>.<p>"They think in the mindset of absolute power," he said.</p>.<p>But internet and social media use has exploded in Pakistan in recent years, fuelled by the widespread availability of cheap smartphones.</p>.<p>Mobile broadband subscribers jumped from 56 million in 2018 to 116 million in 2022 -- around half of the country -- according to the telecom regulator.</p>.<p>Internet censorship has been common in recent decades, even under Khan's government.</p>.<p>But a young, tech-savvy citizenry has adapted quickly, using Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) to disguise their locations and skirt restrictions, Ahmad said.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/pak-president-alvi-holds-hours-long-meeting-with-imran-khan-1218045.html" target="_blank">Pak President Alvi holds hours-long meeting with Imran Khan</a></strong></p>.<p>Despite the ban, Twitter "was still very active in the country because people had their VPNs ready," he added.</p>.<p>The mobile data outage, however, cannot be circumvented in that way.</p>.<p>In Peshawar, PTI supporter Ikram Khan told <em>AFP </em>that party activists were expecting "a complete (internet) shutdown", so they hurriedly transferred mobile phone clips to computers equipped with wired internet connections and VPNs.</p>.<p>There was a delay in uploading the videos to Instagram and Twitter, and streaming service Facebook Live could not be used, but "we still did our job well", the 31-year-old told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>"We know how to handle the situation."</p>.<p>The internet shutdown has triggered international condemnation.</p>.<p>Amnesty International Pakistan campaigner Rimmel Mohydin told <em>AFP </em>it was "a clear human rights violation".</p>.<p>It can "facilitate further violations of human rights, including impeding the documentation of unlawful use of force," she said.</p>.<p>Such remarks give credence to PTI claims they are being silenced, according to analyst Hasan Askari.</p>.<p>"The international concern definitely goes in their favour," he said.</p>.<p>Khan came to power in 2018 marketing himself as a political outsider, riding a pioneering wave of social media enthusiasm to challenge the country's two main dynastic parties, who between them have ruled Pakistan for decades.</p>.<p>Last April, after having lost the key support of Pakistan's powerful military -- which has itself ruled the country directly for more than three decades -- he was ousted in a no-confidence vote.</p>.<p>The ensuing political chaos has exacerbated an economic downturn that has seen decades-high inflation, the rupee tumbling to a record low Thursday, and deadlocked bailout negotiations with the International Monetary Fund.</p>.<p>The latest internet outage has added to those woes, costing Pakistan as much as $53 million a day according to global internet monitor NetBlocks, with mobile data coverage powering economic transactions, including credit and debit card point-of-sale terminals.</p>.<p>A shaky coalition government now faces the prospect of an electorate galvanised by simultaneous political and economic crises ahead of elections due no later than October.</p>.<p>The blackout "is quite disproportionate" said Khilji. "It does show a panic where the state is sort of caught off guard and it seems like they didn't really plan this well.</p>.<p>"The biggest issue is that people are already frustrated with the economic situation and this just adds on top of that," he said.</p>.<p>"It's giving more of a reason for citizens to be unhappy with the current government."</p>