PLAYERUNKNOWN BATTLEGROUNDS (PUBG) Temporarily Banned in Pakistan

PLAYERUNKNOWN BATTLEGROUNDS (PUBG) Temporarily Banned in Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) has briefly restricted the PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds (PUBG), an online fight game, for being “addictive” to players.

The “PTA has gotten various grievances against PUBG wherein it is expressed that the game is addictive, wastage of time and represents a genuinely negative effect on the physical and mental strength of the Children,” the administrative body said in its announcement.”

“It included that the choice returned the grievances got from various sections of society just as media reports asserting “instances of self-destruction credited to PUBG game. Noteworthy Lahore High court has likewise coordinated PTA to investigate the issue.

“The Authority likewise chose to request perspectives on the general population concerning the said internet game. In such a way open is urged to give input through [email protected] by July 10, 2020,” the announcement read further.

PUBG ‘under investigation’

A month ago, nearby media had detailed that an adolescent purportedly passed on by self-destruction in Lahore’s Hanjarwal neighborhood after he “missed his crucial” in PUBG.

Top police authorities had said the little youngster “made the extraordinary stride for not finishing his errand while playing the web-based game”, a nearby news source had said. It cited the administrator of police (SP) for activities in Lahore’s Saddar, Ghazanfar Syed, as saying: “We discovered his cell phone on the bed with the PUBG game on around then close to his body.”

Notification from PTA

“The PUBG has been under investigation for being a savage game and because of this. Numerous nations are considering prohibiting it. Preceding that, a 20-year-old had additionally passed on by self-destruction that month in Lahore’s Saddar Bazaar territory. The youngster’s folks had prevented him from playing the web-based game, police had said.

Youngsters biting the dust by self-destruction

The News uncovered that 22-year-old youth in Quetta passed on self-destruction in wake of missing an errand in PUBG. Police said.

Suicide due to PUBG

Two young people have just ended it all over the game in the course of recent weeks.
The police head of Lahore has mentioned Punjab Inspector-General of Police Shoaib Dastagir to boycott PUBG following a 16-year-old’s passing by self-destruction in Lahore’s Hanjarwal zone after the youngster missed a crucial in the game.

A letter sent by LahoreCapital City Police Officer (CCPO) Zulfiqar Hameed to IG Punjab read: “PUBG is an online multiplayer game that has increased monstrous notoriety among youngsters. The game has impacted youngsters and changed their conduct.”

 

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