Pakistan court acquits man charged with cyber crime linked to British riots
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Mr Farhan Asif, who ran a web publication, was acquitted as investigators could not find any basis to prove he was involved in any illegal activity.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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LAHORE – A Pakistani court on Aug 26 acquitted a local man of cyber-crime offences involving the spread of fake online information that fuelled riots in Britain, his lawyer said.
The riots began after false information circulated online wrongly blaming an Islamist migrant for the killing of three young girls
Mr Farhan Asif, who ran a web publication, was arrested in the eastern Pakistani city of Lahore and charged last week by the country’s Federal Investigation Agency (FIA).
“He has been absolved in the investigation,” his lawyer Rana Rizwan Akhtar told Reuters TV, saying the investigation agency could not find any basis to prove that his client was involved in any illegal activity.
The court acquitted the accused after the agency submitted its report, he said.
Mr Asif provided the agency with all of his social media accounts and access to all of his devices, he said.
The accused posted an article on his X social media account that said the attacker was a Muslim immigrant, and also shared pictures of the killings, according to the case registered against him. REUTERS

