Rights Groups Oppose Children’s Digital Exclusion

1 min read

LAHORE: Several digital and child rights groups have cautioned that blanket bans or age-based prohibitions on children’s access to social media are a flawed and regressive response to risks including online abuse, exploitation, harassment and exposure to harmful content.

Such measures shift responsibility away from the government and technology companies and place the burden on children and families, the Digital Rights Foundation, Search for Justice, Child Rights Movement (Punjab), and Children Advocacy Network (Pakistan) asserted in a joint statement.

They emphasised that online safety was a critical child protection issue requiring urgent, coordinated and effective action.

Children face real and growing risks in digital spaces. These risks persist due to regulatory gaps, weak platform accountability, and inadequate government oversight of digital environments.

However, the groups stressed, bans undermined children’s rights to information, learning, expression, and participation, while failing to address the systemic conditions that enable online harm.

The UN Committee on the Rights of the Child has affirmed that children’s rights apply fully in the digital environment and called for protection alongside access, participation, and empowerment, rather than exclusion from digital spaces, particularly in contexts where regulatory and data protection safeguards remain weak.

In Pakistan’s digital ecosystem, blanket bans are also technically difficult to enforce and risk pushing children toward unregulated and unsafe online spaces, thereby reducing opportunities for guidance, safeguarding, and early intervention, they cautioned.

The organisations cautioned that many age-based restriction proposals rely on intrusive age-verification and monitoring mechanisms that risk expanding surveillance of children. In the absence of a comprehensive data protection framework, such measures could expose children’s personal data to misuse, profiling, and long-term harm, undermining privacy and safety in the name of protection.

Protecting children online requires regulation, not exclusion. Clear child-safety obligations for digital platforms, age-appropriate design and safety standards, effective responses to online abuse and exploitation, and investment in digital literacy and parental support are essential components of a rights-based approach to child online protection, they added.

News Published in Express Tribune on February 1st, 2026.

Previous Story

Screens Over Mothers: Mobile Use Stunting kids’ Minds

Next Story

Over 600 Child Abuse Videos Recovered as Major Exploitation Network Busted

Latest from Blog

IHC Seeks Answers on Action under ‘Zainab’ Child Protection Law

ISLAMABAD: More than five years after the passage of a landmark child protection law, key provisions of the Zainab Alert, Response and Recovery Act, 2020 — including the agency meant to issue rapid alerts for missing children — remain unimplemented, the Islamabad High Court was told on June 4. During the…

Woman, Two Others Arrested for ‘Selling’ Girl in Swabi

SWABI: The police on 3rd June recovered a girl, who was allegedly sold for Rs50,000 to a man from Punjab, and arrested three accused. The incident occurred in the Chota Lahor tehsil, the police said, adding that the girl’s father, Ayaz Khan, was reportedly kept in the dark about the…

Conviction Rate in Rape Cases in Sindh Climbs to 22pc in Five Years

• Official report links legal reforms, specialised investigation units and gender-based violence courts for sharp increase • Police cite better evidence handling and coordination with medico-legal officers; majority of cases still end in acquittals KARACHI: The conviction rate in rape cases in Sindh rose to 22 per cent in 2025…

KP to set up 72 Chief Minister Model Schools

PESHAWAR: Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Sohail Afridi has directed the education department to immediately initiate work on the legal framework for the construction of 72 Chief Minister Model Schools across the province. He stated this while chairing a meeting on the initiative, which is part of the government’s education reform…

SC Upholds Death Sentence Awarded to Child Rapist, Killer

ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court has upheld a sentence awarded to a child rapist and a murderer, ruling that individuals who voluntarily become intoxicated cannot claim exemption from criminal liability. “Intoxication caused by one’s own negligence or recklessness does not excuse the offence,” affirmed Justice Muhammad Hashim Khan Kakar in a…
Go toTop