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Sunday, 23 October 2016

Cyberbullying

Cyberbullying is the act of harming or harassing via information technology networks in a repeated and deliberate manner. With the increased use of communication technology, cyberbullying has become increasingly common, especially among teenagers. Awareness has also risen, due in part to high-profile cases like the suicide of Tyler Clementi. Legal definition
Cyberbullying is defined in legal glossaries as actions that use information and communication technologies to support deliberate, repeated, and hostile behavior by an individual or group, that is intended to harm another or others. use of communication technologies for the intention of harming another person use of Internet service and mobile technologies such as web pages and discussion groups as well as instant messaging or SMS text messaging with the intention of harming another person. Examples of what constitutes cyberbullying include communications that seek to intimidate, control, manipulate, put down, falsely discredit, or humiliate the recipient. The actions are deliberate, repeated, and hostile behavior intended to harm another. Cyberbullying has been defined by the National Crime Prevention Council: "When the Internet, cell phones or other devices are used to send or post text or images intended to hurt or embarrass another person." Other researchers use similar language to describe the phenomenon.

A cyberbully may or may not know their target. A cyberbully may be anonymous and may solicit involvement of other people online who do not know the target. This is known as a "digital pile-on. Cyberstalking. The practice of cyberbullying is not limited to children and, while the behavior is identified by the same definition when practiced by adults, the distinction in age groups sometimes refers to the abuse as cyberstalking or cyberharassment when perpetrated by adults toward adults.Common tactics used by cyberstalkers are performed in public forums, social media or online information sites and are intended to threaten a victim's earnings, employment, reputation, or safety. Behaviors may include encouraging others to harass the victim and trying to affect a victim's online participation. Many cyberstalkers try to damage the reputation of their victim and turn other people against them.Cyberstalking may include false accusations, monitoring, making threats, identity theft, damage to data or equipment, the solicitation of minors for sex, or gathering information in order to harass. A repeated pattern of such actions and harassment against a target by an adult constitutes cyberstalking. Cyberstalking often features linked patterns of online and offline behavior. There are consequences of law in offline stalking and online stalking, and cyberstalkers can be put in jail. Cyberstalking is a form of cyberbullying.

Trolling
Trolls and cyberbullies do not always have the same goals. Some Internet trolls do engage in cyberbullying (including harassment, defamation, or spreading of information which would otherwise be concealed), but other trolls may be engaged in comparatively harmless mischief. There is disagreement over what the precise definition of Internet trolling is. On the other hand, cyberbullying exclusively involves actions intended to harass. Early (1990s) definitions of 'trolling' primarily consisted of low-level disruption of discussions, for instance by posting meaningless questions for their own amusement, without any regard over whether the targets are hurt. Current (2010s) definitions of trolling are more broad, and include those who cyberbully, with the explicit desire to demean and hurt their victims.

Traditional bullying
Certain characteristics inherent in online technologies increase the likelihood that they will be exploited for deviant purposes. Unlike physical bullying, electronic bullies can remain virtually anonymous using temporary email accounts, pseudonyms in chat rooms, instant messaging programs, cell-phone text messaging, and other Internet venues to mask their identity; this perhaps frees them from normative and social constraints on their behavior.

Additionally, electronic forums often lack supervision. While chat hosts regularly observe the dialog in some chat rooms in an effort to police conversations and evict offensive individuals, personal messages sent between users (such as electronic mail or text messages) are viewable only by the sender and the recipient, thereby falling outside the regulatory reach of such authorities. In addition, when teenagers know more about computers and cellular phones than their parents or guardians, they are therefore able to operate the technologies without concern that a parent will discover their experience with bullying (whether as a victim or offender).

Another factor is the inseparability of a cellular phone from its owner, making that person a perpetual target for victimization. Users often need to keep their phone turned on for legitimate purposes, which provides the opportunity for those with malicious intentions to engage in persistent unwelcome behavior such as harassing telephone calls or threatening and insulting statements via the cellular phone’s text messaging capabilities. Cyberbullying thus penetrates the walls of a home, traditionally a place where victims could seek refuge from other forms of bullying. Compounding this infiltration into the home life of the cyberbully victim is the unique way in which the internet can "create simultaneous sensations of exposure (the whole world is watching) and alienation (no one understands)." For youth who experience shame or self-hatred, this effect is dangerous because it can lead to extreme self-isolation.

One possible advantage for victims of cyberbullying over traditional bullying is that they may sometimes be able to avoid it simply by avoiding the site/chat room in question. Email addresses and phone numbers can be changed; in addition, most email accounts now offer services that will automatically filter out messages from certain senders before they even reach the inbox, and phones offer similar caller ID functions.

However, this does not protect against all forms of cyberbullying. Publishing of defamatory material about a person on the internet is extremely difficult to prevent and once it is posted, many people or archiving services can potentially download and copy it, at which point it is almost impossible to remove from the Internet. Some perpetrators may post victims' photos, or victims' edited photos featuring defaming captions or pasting victims' faces on nude bodies. Examples of famous forums for disclosing personal data or photos to "punish" the "enemies" include the Hong Kong Golden Forum, Livejournal, and more recently JuicyCampus. Despite policies that describe cyberbullying as a violation of the terms of service, many social networking Web sites have been used to that end.

Cyberbullying is sometimes used by the targets of bullying to retaliate against their bullies, since factors such as anonymity, absence of the bully's supporting friends, and irrelevancy of physical strength in the online environment, make it safer to counterattack the bully by that means. Nancy E. Willard notes in Cyberbullying and Cyberthreats, "Unfortunately, students who retaliate against bullies online can be mistakenly perceived as the source of the problem. This can be especially true under circumstances where the original victimization left no tangible evidence, but the cyberbullying did." Author Danah Boyd writes, "those who subscribe to Olweus’ definition view bullying as a practice in which someone of differential physical or social power subjects another person to repeated psychological, physical, or social aggression."

Even though Olweus’ definition is accepted, there are others who believe that the media does not categorize events appropriately. For example, "news media has taken to describing serious criminal acts of aggression by teens as bullying rather than using terms like stalking, harassment, or abuse. Ironically, teens often use the term bullying to refer to the kinds of incidents that Olweus described while adults and news media use this term far more loosely."

Methods used

Where Cyberbullying Is Occurring.
Manuals to educate the public, teachers and parents summarize, "Cyberbullying is being cruel to others by sending or posting harmful material using a cell phone or the internet." Research, legislation and education in the field are ongoing. Basic definitions and guidelines to help recognize and cope with what is regarded as abuse of electronic communications have been identified.

Cyberbullying involves repeated behavior with intent to harm.
Cyberbullying is perpetrated through harassment, cyberstalking, denigration (sending or posting cruel rumors and falsehoods to damage reputation and friendships), impersonation, and exclusion (intentionally and cruelly excluding someone from an online group)
Cyberbullying can be as simple as continuing to send emails or text messages harassing someone who has said they want no further contact with the sender. It may also include public actions such as repeated threats, sexual remarks, pejorative labels (i.e., hate speech) or defamatory false accusations, ganging up on a victim by making the person the subject of ridicule in online forums, hacking into or vandalizing sites about a person, and posting false statements as fact aimed a discrediting or humiliating a targeted person. Cyberbullying could be limited to posting rumors about a person on the internet with the intention of bringing about hatred in others' minds or convincing others to dislike or participate in online denigration of a target. It may go to the extent of personally identifying victims of crime and publishing materials severely defaming or humiliating them.

Cyberbullies may disclose victims' personal data (e.g. real name, home address, or workplace/schools) at websites or forums or may use impersonation, creating fake accounts, comments or sites posing as their target for the purpose of publishing material in their name that defames, discredits or ridicules them. This can leave the cyberbully anonymous which can make it difficult for the offender to be caught or punished for their behavior, although not all cyberbullies maintain their anonymity. Text or instant messages and emails between friends can also constitute cyberbullying if what is said or displayed is hurtful to the participants.

The recent use of mobile applications and rise of smartphones have yielded to a more accessible form of cyberbullying. It is expected that cyberbullying via these platforms will be associated with bullying via mobile phones to a greater extent than exclusively through other more stationary internet platforms. In addition, the combination of cameras and Internet access and the instant availability of these modern smartphone technologies yield themselves to specific types of cyberbullying not found in other platforms. It is likely that those cyberbullied via mobile devices will experience a wider range of cyberbullying types than those exclusively bullied elsewhere.

While most cases are considered to be cyberbullying, some teens argue that most events are simply drama. For example, Danah Boyd writes, "teens regularly used that word drama to describe various forms of interpersonal conflict that ranged from insignificant joking around to serious jealousy-driven relational aggression. Whereas adults might have labeled many of these practices as bullying, teens saw them as drama." Drama among teens has existed for years but now that it is easier to share information through social media, it seems that simple drama gets out of control.

In social media
Cyberbullying can take place on social media sites such as Facebook, Myspace, and Twitter. "By 2008, 93% of young people between the ages of 12 and 17 were online. In fact, youth spend more time with media than any single other activity besides sleeping." There are many risks attached to social media sites, and cyberbullying is one of the larger risks. One million children were harassed, threatened or subjected to other forms of cyberbullying on Facebook during the past year, while 90 percent of social-media-using teens who have witnessed online cruelty say they have ignored mean behavior on social media, and 35 percent have done this frequently. 95 percent of social-media-using teens who have witnessed cruel behavior on social networking sites say they have seen others ignoring the mean behavior, and 55 percent witness this frequently. According to a 2013 Pew Research study, eight out of 10 teens who use social media share more information about themselves than they have in the past. This includes location, images, and contact information. "The most recent case of cyber-bullying and illegal activity on Facebook involved a memorial page for the young boys who lost their lives to suicide due to anti-gay bullying. The page quickly turned into a virtual grave desecration and platform condoning gay teen suicide and the murdering of homosexuals. Photos were posted of executed homosexuals, desecrated photos of the boys who died and supposed snuff photos of gays who have been murdered. Along with this were thousands of comments encouraging murder sprees against gays, encouragement of gay teen suicide, death threats etc. In addition, the page continually exhibited pornography to minors." In order to protect children, it’s important that personal information such as age, birthday, school/church, phone number, etc. be kept confidential. 

Cyberbullying can also take place through the use of websites belonging to certain groups to effectively request the targeting of another individual or group. An example of this is the bullying of climate scientists and activists.

In gaming

Of those who reported having experienced online harassment in a Pew Research poll, 16% said the most recent incident occurred in an online game. A study from National Sun Yat-sen University observed that children who enjoyed violent video games were significantly more likely to both experience and perpetrate cyberbullying.

Gaming was a more common venue for men to experience harassment, whereas women's' harassment tended to occur via social media. Most respondents considered gaming culture to be equally welcoming to both genders, though 44% thought it favored men. Keza MacDonald writes in The Guardian that sexism exists in gaming culture, but is not mainstream within it.Sexual harassment in gaming generally involves slurs directed towards women, sex role stereotyping, and overaggressive language. U.S. President Barack Obama made reference to harassment of women gamers during remarks in honor of Women's History Month.

Competitive gaming scenes have been less welcoming of women than has broader gaming culture. In an internet-streamed fighting game competition, one female gamer forfeited a match after the coach of her team, Aris Bakhtanians, stated, "The sexual harassment is part of the culture. If you remove that from the fighting game community, it's not the fighting game community" The comments were widely condemned by gamers, with comments in support of sexual harassment "drowned out by a vocal majority of people expressing outrage, disappointment and sympathy." The incident built momentum for action to counter sexual harassment in gaming.

In a number of instances, game developers have been subjected to harassment and death threats by players upset by changes to a game or by a developer's online policies. Harassment also occurs in reaction to critics such as Jack Thompson or Anita Sarkeesian, whom some fans see as a threat to the medium.Various individuals have been harassed in connection with the Gamergate controversy.Harassment related to gaming is not of a notably different severity or tenor compared to online harassment motivated by other subcultures or advocacy issues.

Sabotage among rival crowdfunding campaigns is a recurrent problem for projects related to gaming.

In search engines
Information cascades happen when users start passing on information they assume to be true, but cannot know to be true, based on information on what other users are doing. Information cascades can be accelerated by search engines' ranking technologies and their tendency to return results relevant to a user's previous interests. This type of information spreading is hard to stop. Information cascades over social media and the Internet may also be harmless, and may contain truthful information.

Bullies use Google bombs (a term applicable to any search engine)[citation needed] to increase the eminence of favored posts sorted by the most popular searches, done by linking to those posts from as many other web pages as possible. Examples include the Santorum campaign organized by the LGBT lobby. Google bombs can manipulate the Internet's search engines regardless of how authentic the pages are, but there is a way to counteract this type of manipulation as well.

Law enforcement
A majority of states have laws that explicitly include electronic forms of communication within stalking or harassment laws.

Most law enforcement agencies have cyber-crime units and often Internet stalking is treated with more seriousness than reports of physical stalking.  Help and resources can be searched by state or area.

Schools
The safety of schools is increasingly becoming a focus of state legislative action. There was an increase in cyberbullying enacted legislation between 2006–2010. Initiatives and curriclulum requirements also exist in the UK (the Ofsted eSafety guidance) and Australia (Overarching Learning Outcome 13).

In 2012, a group of teens in New Haven, Connecticut developed an app to help fight bullying. Called "Back Off Bully" (BOB), the web app is an anonymous resource for computer, smart phone or iPad. When someone witnesses or is the victim of bullying, they can immediately report the incident. The app asks questions about time, location and how the bullying is happening. As well as providing positive action and empowerment over an incident, the reported information helps by going to a data base where administrators study it. Common threads are spotted so others can intervene and break the bully's pattern. BOB, the brainchild of fourteen teens in a design class, is being considered as standard operating procedure at schools across the state.

Protection
There are laws that only address online harassment of children or focus on child predators as well as laws that protect adult cyberstalking victims, or victims of any age. Currently, there are 45 cyberstalking (and related) laws on the books.

While some sites specialize in laws that protect victims age 18 and under, Working to Halt Online Abuse is a help resource containing a list of current and pending cyberstalking-related United States federal and state laws.[56] It also lists those states that do not have laws yet and related laws from other countries. The Global Cyber Law Database (GCLD) aims to become the most comprehensive and authoritative source of cyber laws for all countries.

Age
Children report negative online behaviors occurring from the second grade. According to research, boys initiate negative online activity earlier than girls do. However, by middle school, girls are more likely to engage in cyberbullying than boys.Whether the bully is male or female, his or her purpose is to intentionally embarrass others, harass, intimidate, or make threats online to one another. This bullying occurs via email, text messaging, posts to blogs, and web sites.

The 8 most common cyberbullying tactics used by teens are listed below:

Exclusion: Teenagers intentionally exclude others from an online group.
Cyberstalking: Teens will harass others by constantly sending emails, messages, or tagging others in posts they don’t want to be tagged in.
Gossip: Post or send cruel messages that damage another’s reputation, relationships, or confidence.
Outing/Trickery: Trick another teen into revealing secrets or embarrassing information which the cyberbully will then share online.
Harassment: Post or send offensive, insulting, and mean messages repeatedly.
Impersonation: Create fake accounts to exploit another teen’s trust. They may also hack into an account and post or send messages that are damaging to the person’s reputation or relationships.
Cyber Threats: Threaten or imply violent behavior toward others to make them feel uncomfortable.
Flaming: Fights online that involve hateful or offensive messages that may be posted to various websites, forums, or blogs.
Studies in the psychosocial effects of cyberspace have begun to monitor the impacts cyberbullying may have on the victims, and the consequences it may lead to. Consequences of cyberbullying are multi-faceted, and affect online and offline behavior. Research on adolescents reported that changes in the victims' behavior as a result of cyberbullying could be positive. Victims "created a cognitive pattern of bullies, which consequently helped them to recognize aggressive people." However, the Journal of Psychosocial Research on Cyberspace abstract reports critical impacts in almost all of the respondents’, taking the form of lower self-esteem, loneliness, disillusionment, and distrust of people. The more extreme impacts were self-harm. Children have killed each other and committed suicide after having been involved in a cyberbullying incident.

The most current research in the field defines cyberbullying as "an aggressive, intentional act or behaviour that is carried out by a group or an individual repeatedly and over time against a victim who cannot easily defend him or herself" (Smith & Slonje, 2007, p. 249). Though the use of sexual remarks and threats are sometimes present in cyberbullying, it is not the same as sexual harassment, typically occurs among peers, and does not necessarily involve sexual predators.

Some cases of digital self-harm have been reported, where an individual engages in cyberbullying against themselves, or purposefully and knowingly exposes themselves to cyberbullying.

Adults
Stalking online has criminal consequences just as physical stalking. A target's understanding of why cyberstalking is happening is helpful to remedy and take protective action to restore remedy. Cyberstalking is an extension of physical stalking. Among factors that motivate stalkers are: envy, pathological obsession (professional or sexual), unemployment or failure with own job or life; intention to intimidate and cause others to feel inferior; the stalker is delusional and believes he/she "knows" the target; the stalker wants to instill fear in a person to justify his/her status; belief they can get away with it (anonymity). UK National Workplace Bullying Advice Line theorizes that bullies harass victims in order to make up for inadequacies in their own lives.

The US federal cyberstalking law is designed to prosecute people for using electronic means to repeatedly harass or threaten someone online. There are resources dedicated to assisting adult victims deal with cyberbullies legally and effectively. One of the steps recommended is to record everything and contact police.

Research
Australia
The nationwide Australian Covert Bullying Prevalence Survey (Cross et al., 2009)[69] assessed cyber-bullying experiences among 7,418 students. Rates of cyber-bullying increased with age, with 4.9% of students in Year 4 reporting cyberbullying compared to 7.9% in year nine. Cross et al., (2009) reported that rates of bullying and harassing others were lower, but also increased with age. Only 1.2% of Year 4 students reported cyber-bullying others compared to 5.6% of Year 9 students.

European Union
Across Europe the average 6% of the children (9–16 years old) have been bullied and only 3% of them confessed to be a bully. (Hasebrink et al., 2011). However, in an earlier publication of Hasenbrink et al. (2009), reporting on the results from a meta analysis from European Union countries, the authors estimated (via median results) that approximately 18% of European young people had been "bullied/harassed/stalked" via the internet and mobile phones. Cyber-harassment rates for young people across the EU member states ranged from 10% to 52%. The decreasing numbers can caused by developing increasingly specific methods, dividing the tasks into different variables.

Finland
In addition to the current research, Sourander et al. (2010) conducted a population-based cross-sectional study that took place in Finland. The authors of this study took the self-reports of 2215 Finish adolescents between the ages of 13 to 16 years old about cyberbullying and cybervictimization during the past 6 months. It was found that, amongst the total sample, 4.8% were cybervictims only, 7.4% were cyberbullies only, and 5.4% were cyberbully-victims. Cybervictim-only status was associated with a variety of factors, including emotional and peer problems, sleeping difficulties, and feeling unsafe in school. Cyberbully-only status was associated with factors such as hyperactivity and low prosocial behavior, as well as conduct problems. Cyberbully-victim status was associated with all of the risk factors that were associated with both cybervictim-only status and cyberbully-only status. The authors of this study were able to conclude that cyberbullying as well as cybervictimization is associated not only with psychiatric issues, but psychosomatic issues. Many adolescents in the study reported headaches or difficulty sleeping. The authors believe that their results indicate a greater need for new ideas on how to prevent cyberbullying and what to do when it occurs. It is clearly a world-wide problem that needs to be taken seriously.

Japan
According to recent research, in Japan, 17 percent (compared with a 25-country average of 37 percent) of youth between the ages of 8 and 17 have been victim to online bullying activities. The number shows that online bullying is a serious concern in Japan. Teenagers who spend more than 10 hours a week on Internet are more likely to become the target of online bullying. Only 28 percent of the survey participants understood what cyberbullying is. However, they do notice the severity of the issue since 63 percent of the surveyed worry about being targeted as victims of cyberbullying.

With the advance of Internet technology, everyone can access the internet. Since teenagers find themselves congregating socially on the internet via social media, they become easy targets for cyberbullying. Forms of social media where cyberbullying occurs include but are not limited to email, text, chat rooms, mobile phones, mobile phone cameras and social websites (Facebook, Twitter). The ways a cyberbully potentially attacks a target include sending threatening email, online posting of targets' private contact information, sending numerous anonymous emails to the target to harass them, or talking about the target in chat rooms or text. Some cyberbullies even set up websites or blogs to post the target’s images, publicize their personal information, gossip about the target, express why they hate the target, request people to agree with the bully’s view, and sending links to the target to make sure they are watching the activity.

Much cyberbullying is an act of relational aggression, which involves alienating the victim from his or her peers through gossip or ostracism.This kind of attack can be easily launched via texting or other online activities. Here is an example of a 19-year-old teenager sharing his real experience of cyberbullying. When he was in high school, his classmates posted his photo online, insulted him constantly, and asked him to die. Because of the constant harassment, he did attempt suicide twice. Even when he quit school, the attacks did not stop.

Cyberbullying can cause serious psychological impact to the victims. They often feel anxious, nervous, tired, and depressed. Other examples of negative psychological trauma include losing confidence as a result being socially isolated from their schoolmates or friends. Mental psychological problems can also show up in the form of headaches, skin problems, abdominal pain, sleep problems, bed-wetting, and crying. It may also lead victims to commit suicide to end bullying.

United States

Percentage of Victims of Cyberbullying By Year Across the United States.
2000
A survey by the Crimes Against Children Research Center at the University of New Hampshire in 2000 found that 6% of the young people in the survey had experienced some form of harassment including threats and negative rumours and 2% had suffered distressing harassment.

2004
The 2004 I-Safe.org survey of 1,500 students between grades 4 and 8 found:

42% of children had been bullied while online. One in four have had it happen more than once.
35% had been threatened online. Nearly one in five had had it happen more than once.
21% had received mean or threatening e-mails or other messages.
58% admitted that someone had said mean or hurtful things to them online. More than four out of ten said it had happened more than once.
58% had not told their parents or an adult about something mean or hurtful that had happened to them online.
2005
The Youth Internet Safety Survey-2, conducted by the Crimes Against Children Research Center at the University of New Hampshire in 2005, found that 9% of the young people in the survey had experienced some form of harassment. The survey was a nationally representative telephone survey of 1,500 youth 10–17 years old. One third reported feeling distressed by the incident, with distress being more likely for younger respondents and those who were the victims of aggressive harassment (including being telephoned, sent gifts, or visited at home by the harasser). Compared to youth not harassed online, victims are more likely to have social problems. On the other hand, youth who harass others are more likely to have problems with rule breaking and aggression. Significant overlap is seen — youth who are harassed are significantly more likely to also harass others.

Hinduja and Patchin[who?] completed a study in the summer of 2005 of approximately 1,500 Internet-using adolescents and found that over one-third of youth reported being victimized online, and over 16% of respondents admitted to cyber-bullying others. While most of the instances of cyber-bullying involved relatively minor behavior (41% were disrespected, 19% were called names), over 12% were physically threatened and about 5% were scared for their safety. Notably, fewer than 15% of victims told an adult about the incident.

Additional research by Hinduja and Patchin in 2007 found that youth who report being victims of cyber-bullying also experience stress or strain that is related to offline problem behaviors such as running away from home, cheating on a school test, skipping school, or using alcohol or marijuana. The authors acknowledge that both of these studies provide only preliminary information about the nature and consequences of online bullying, due to the methodological challenges associated with an online survey.

According to a 2005 survey by the National Children's Home charity and Tesco Mobile of 770 youth between the ages of 11 and 19, 20% of respondents revealed that they had been bullied via electronic means. Almost three-quarters (73%) stated that they knew the bully, while 26% stated that the offender was a stranger. 10% of responders indicated that another person has taken a picture and/or video of them via a cellular phone camera, consequently making them feel uncomfortable, embarrassed, or threatened. Many youths are not comfortable telling an authority figure about their cyber-bullying victimization for fear their access to technology will be taken from them; while 24% and 14% told a parent or teacher respectively, 28% did not tell anyone while 41% told a friend.
2006
According to the 2006 Harris Interactive Cyberbullying Research Report, commissioned by the National Crime Prevention Council, cyber-bullying is a problem that "affects almost half of all American teens".

2007
Distribution of cyberbullying venues used by young people in the US, according to the Centers for Disease Control
Studies published 2007 in the Journal of Adolescent Health indicated young people reporting being victims of electronic aggression in a range of 9% to 35%.
In 2007, Debbie Heimowitz, a Stanford University master's student, created Adina's Deck, a film based on Stanford accredited research. She worked in focus groups for ten weeks in three schools to learn about the problem of cyber-bullying in Northern California. The findings determined that over 60% of students had been cyber-bullied and were victims of cyber-bullying. The film is now being used in classrooms nationwide as it was designed around learning goals pertaining to problems that students had understanding the topic. The middle school of Megan Meier is reportedly using the film as a solution to the crisis in their town.

2008
In the summer of 2008, researchers Sameer Hinduja (Florida Atlantic University) and Justin Patchin (University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire) published a book on cyber-bullying that summarized the current state of cyber-bullying research. (Bullying Beyond the Schoolyard: Preventing and Responding to Cyberbullying). Their research documents that cyber-bullying instances have been increasing over the last several years. They also report findings from the most recent study of cyber-bullying among middle-school students. Using a random sample of approximately 2000 middle-school students from a large school district in the southern United States, about 10% of respondents had been cyber-bullied in the previous 30 days while over 17% reported being cyber-bullied at least once in their lifetime. While these rates are slightly lower than some of the findings from their previous research, Hinduja and Patchin point out that the earlier studies were predominantly conducted among older adolescents and Internet samples. That is, older youth use the Internet more frequently and are more likely to experience cyber-bullying than younger children.

2011

Students aged 12–18 who reported being cyber-bullied anywhere during the school year 2011
According to the 2011 National Crime Victimization Survey, conducted by the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, School Crime Supplement (SCS), 9% of students of ages 12–18 admittedly experienced cyberbullying during that school year (with a coefficient of variation between 30% and 50%).[94]

2013
In the Youth Risk Behavior Survey 2013, the Center for Surveillance, Epidemiology, and Laboratory Services of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published results of its survey as part of the Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System (YRBSS) in June 2014, indicating in table 17 the percentage of school children being bullied through e-mail, chat rooms, instant messaging, Web sites, or texting ("electronically bullied") during the course of the year 2013.2014
In 2014, Mehari, Farrell, and Le published a study that focused on the literature on cyberbullying among adolescents. They found that researchers have generally assumed that cyberbullying is distinct from aggression perpetrated in person. They suggest that the media through which aggression is perpetrated may be best conceptualized as a new dimension on which aggression can be classified, rather than cyberbullying as a distinct counterpart to existing forms of aggression and that future research on cyberbullying should be considered within the context of theoretical and empirical knowledge of aggression in adolescence. Mary Howlett-Brandon's doctoral dissertation analyzed the National Crime Victimization Survey: Student Crime Supplement, 2009, to focus on the cyberbullying victimization of Black students and White students in specific conditions.

2015

WalletHub's 2015’s Best & Worst States at Controlling Bullying report measured the relative levels of bullying in 42 states. According to the report, North Dakota, Illinois, Louisiana, Rhode Island, and Washington D.C. have the highest attempted suicide by high school students. The top 5 states with highest percentage of students being bullied on campus is Missouri, Michigan, Idaho, North Dakota, and Montana.

Cyberbullying on social media has usually been student-to-student but recently, students have been cyberbullying their teachers. High School students in Colorado created a Twitter site that bullies many teachers. The bullying ranges from obscenities to false accusations of inappropriate actions with students.

 Cyberstalking legislation
United States
Legislation geared at penalizing cyberbullying has been introduced in a number of U.S. states including New York, Missouri, Rhode Island and Maryland. At least forty five states passed laws against digital harassment. Dardenne Prairie of Springfield, Missouri, passed a city ordinance making online harassment a misdemeanor. The city of St. Charles, Missouri has passed a similar ordinance. Missouri is among other states where lawmakers are pursuing state legislation, with a task forces expected to have "cyberbullying" laws drafted and implemented. In June, 2008, Rep. Linda Sanchez (D-Calif.) and Rep. Kenny Hulshof (R-Mo.) proposed a federal law that would criminalize acts of cyberbullying.

Lawmakers are seeking to address cyberbullying with new legislation because there's currently no specific law on the books that deals with it. A fairly new federal cyberstalking law might address such acts, according to Parry Aftab, but no one has been prosecuted under it yet. The proposed federal law would make it illegal to use electronic means to "coerce, intimidate, harass or cause other substantial emotional distress."

In August 2008, the California state legislature passed one of the first laws in the country to deal directly with cyberbullying. The legislation, Assembly Bill 86 2008, gives school administrators the authority to discipline students for bullying others offline or online. This law took effect, January 1, 2009. A law in New York's Albany County that criminalized cyberbullying was recently struck down as unconstitutional by the New York Court of Appeals in People v. Marquan M..

A recent ruling first seen in the UK determined that it is possible for an Internet Service Provider (ISP) to be liable for the content of sites which it hosts, setting a precedent that any ISP should treat a notice of complaint seriously and investigate it immediately.

18 U.S.C. § 875(c) criminalizes the making of threats via Internet.

European Union
Since the 1990s, the United Kingdom and other European countries have been working to solve workplace bullying since there is no legislation regulating cyberbullying. The pervasive nature of technology has made the act of bullying online much easier.[107] A 24-hour internet connection gives bullies a never ending opportunity to find and bully victims. Employers in the European Union have more legal responsibility to their employees than other countries. Since employers do not the ability to fire or hire an employee at will like in the United States, employers in Europe are held to a high standard in how their employees are treated. The Framework Agreement on Harassment and Violence at Work is a law that prevents bullying occurring in the workplace and holds employers accountable for providing fair working conditionsr. Lawyers pursuing cyberbullying cases use The Ordinance on Victimization at Work law, since they are not any laws specifically condemning cyberbullying.

In 1993, Sweden was the first European Union country to have a law against cyberbullying. The Ordinance on Victimization at Work protected victims from "recurrent reprehensible or distinctly negative actions which are directed which are directed against individual employees in an offensive manner and can result in those employees being placed outside the workplace community". In 2002, France passed the Social Modernization Law, which added consequences to the French Labor Code for cyberbullying such as holding employers accountable for their involvement in harassment. The legislation states, "the employer can be held accountable if it is deemed by court of law that the conduct defile the employee emotionally or physical health in any manner".The United Kingdom does not have anti-bullying legislation. However, it does have the Protection From Harassment Act, an anti-stalking law.The United Kingdom courts have used this legislation in bullying cases. In 2007, the European Union developed the Framework Agreement on Harassment and Violence at Work. The law defines the responsibilities of an employer such as protecting his or her employees from bullies in a work environment and the psychological pain a victim faces from bullies during business hours.
This image portrays the support and awareness that many anti-cyberbullying campaigns have in some countries around the world. The United States and other countries have more extensive legislation on cyberbullying than the European Union. The amount of cyberbullying incidents on social media are widespread and have increased drastically. However, the process of getting a claim against a bully is not an easy one because of the victim's need to provide sufficient evidence to prove the existence of bullying.

As of mid-2015, countries in the European Union like the United Kingdom are in the process of creating law specially related to cyberbullying. Since the process takes time, the government is supporting schools programs to promote internet safety with the help of teachers and parents. This will allow government to take the time it needs to create the cyberbullying laws while helping students safeguarding themselves from cyberbullying as much as they can.

Research on preventative legislation
Researchers suggest that programs be put in place for prevention of cyberbullying. These programs would be incorporated into school curricula and would include online safety and instruction on how to use the Internet properly.This could teach the victim proper methods of potentially avoiding the cyberbully, such as blocking messages or increasing the security on their computer.

Within this suggested school prevention model, even in a perfect world, not one crime can be stopped fully. That is why it is suggested that within this prevention method, effective coping strategies should be introduced and adopted. As with any crime, people learn to cope with what has happened, and the same goes for cyberbullying. People can adopt coping strategies to combat future cyberbullying events. An example of a coping strategy would be a social support group composed of various victims of cyberbullying. That could come together and share experiences, with a formal speaker leading the discussion. Something like a support group can allow students to share their stories, and allows that feeling of them being alone to be removed.

Teachers should be involved in all prevention educational models, as they are essentially the "police" of the classroom. Most cyberbullying often goes unreported as the victim feels nothing can be done to help in their current situation. However, if given the proper tools with preventative measures and more power in the classroom, teachers can be of assistance to the problem of cyber-bullying. If the parent, teacher, and victim can work together, a possible solution or remedy can be found.

There have been many legislative attempts to facilitate the control of bullying and cyberbullying. The problem is due to the fact that some existing legislation is incorrectly thought to be tied to bullying and cyberbullying (terms such as libel and slander). The problem is they do not directly apply to it nor define it as its own criminal behavior. Anti-cyberbullying advocates even expressed concern about the broad scope of applicability of some of the bills attempted to be passed.

In the United States, attempts were made to pass legislation against cyberbullying. Few states attempted to pass broad sanctions in an effort to prohibit cyberbullying. Problem include how to define cyberbullying and cyberstalking, and if charges are pressed, whether it violates the bully's freedom of speech. B. Walther has said that "Illinois is the only state to criminalize 'electronic communication(s) sent for the purpose of harassing another person' when the activity takes place outside a public school setting." Again this came under fire for infringement on freedom of speech.

Harmful effects
Research had demonstrated a number of serious consequences of cyberbullying victimization. For example, victims have lower self-esteem, increased suicidal ideation, and a variety of emotional responses, retaliating, being scared, frustrated, angry, and depressed. People have reported that Cyberbullying can be more harmful than traditional bullying because there is no escaping it.

One of the most damaging effects is that a victim begins to avoid friends and activities, often the very intention of the cyberbully.

Cyberbullying campaigns are sometimes so damaging that victims have committed suicide. There are at least four examples in the United States where cyberbullying has been linked to the suicide of a teenager. The suicide of Megan Meier is a recent example that led to the conviction of the adult perpetrator of the attacks.

According to Lucie Russell, director of campaigns, policy and participation at youth mental health charity Young Minds, young people who suffer from mental disorder are vulnerable to cyberbullying as they are sometimes unable to shrug it off:

When someone says nasty things healthy people can filter that out, they're able to put a block between that and their self-esteem. But mentally unwell people don't have the strength and the self-esteem to do that, to separate it, and so it gets compiled with everything else. To them, it becomes the absolute truth – there's no filter, there's no block. That person will take that on, take it as fact.

Social media has allowed bullies to disconnect from the impact they may be having on others.

Intimidation, emotional damage, suicide
According to the Cyberbullying Research Center, "there have been several high‐profile cases involving teenagers taking their own lives in part because of being harassed and mistreated over the Internet, a phenomenon we have termed cyberbullicide – suicide indirectly or directly influenced by experiences with online aggression."

Cyberbullying is an intense form of psychological abuse, whose victims are more than twice as likely to suffer from mental disorders compared to traditional bullying.

The reluctance youth have in telling an authority figure about instances of cyberbullying has led to fatal outcomes. At least three children between the ages of 12 and 13 have committed suicide due to depression brought on by cyberbullying, according to reports by USA Today and the Baltimore Examiner. These would include the suicide of Ryan Halligan and the suicide of Megan Meier, the latter of which resulted in United States v. Lori Drew.

More recently, teenage suicides tied to cyberbullying have become more prevalent. The latest victim of cyberbullying through the use of mobile applications was Rebecca Ann Sedwick, who committed suicide after being terrorized through mobile applications such as Ask.fm, Kik Messenger and Voxer.

On youth and teenagers
The effects of cyberbullying vary. But, research illustrates that cyber bullying adversely affects youth to a higher degree than adolescents and adults. Youth are more likely to suffer since they are still growing mentally and physically. Jennifer N. Caudle, a certified family physician, describes the effects as "Kids that are bullied are likely to experience anxiety, depression, loneliness, unhappiness and poor sleep".


This image shows different aspects of cyberbullying that can take place on the internet which puts more emotional strain on the younger children and teenage who experience cyberbullying.
Most of the time cyberbullying goes unnoticed; the younger generation hides their bullying from anyone that can help to prevent the bullying from occurring and from getting worse. Between 20% and 40% of adolescents are victims of cyberbullying worldwide. The youth slowly change their behaviors and actions so they become more withdrawn and quiet than they are used to, but no one notices since the change is subtle. The youth become more anxious and timid in all types of environments and settings. According to A Study on Primary School Students’ Being Cyber Bullies and Victims According to Gender, Grade, and Socioeconomic Status, cyberbullying victims "have psychological problems, such as lack of self-confidence, distress, disappointment, fear of school, lack of academic achievement, loneliness, anxiety, depression, and suicide. Cyberbullying will "become a serious problem in the future with an increase in the Internet and mobile phone usage among young people".

If preventive actions are not taken against cyberbullying, younger children in addition to teenagers will feel more lonely and depressed along with having a significant change in their eating and sleeping patterns as well as loss of interest in their normal activities. These changes will affect their growth and development into adulthood. Younger children and teenagers are 76.2% less likely to display suicidal behaviors and thoughts, but are still at risk depending on other factors such as mental health status, home care, relationships with others. The risk of suicide increases 35% to 45% when victims do not have any support from anyone in their life and cyberbullying amplifies the situation more.

Awareness
Campaigns
International
The Cybersmile Foundation is a cyberbullying charity committed to tackling all forms of online bullying, abuse, and hate campaigns. The charity was founded in 2010 in response to the increasing number of cyberbullying related incidents of depression, eating disorders, social isolation, self-harm and suicides devastating lives around the world. Cybersmile provides support to victims and their friends and families through social media interaction, email and helpline support. They also run an annual event, Stop Cyberbullying Day, to draw attention to the issue.

Spain
There are multiple non-profit organizations that fight cyberbullying and cyberstalking. They advise victims, provide awareness campaigns, and report offenses to the police. These NGOs include the Protégeles, PantallasAmigas, Foundation Alia2, the non-profit initiative Actúa Contra el Ciberacoso, the National Communications Technology Institute (INTECO), the Agency of Internet quality, the Agencia Española de Protección de Datos, the Oficina de Seguridad del Internauta, the Spanish Internet users' Association, the Internauts' Association, and the Spanish Association of Mothers and Parents Internauts. The Government of Castile and León has also created a Plan de Prevención del Ciberacoso y Promoción de la Navegación Segura en Centro Escolares, and the Government of the Canary Islands has created a portal on the phenomenon called Viveinternet.

United States
In March 2007, the Advertising Council in the United States, in partnership with the National Crime Prevention Council, U.S. Department of Justice, and Crime Prevention Coalition of America, joined to announce the launch of a new public service advertising campaign designed to educate preteens and teens about how they can play a role in ending cyber-bullying.

A Pew Internet and American Life survey found that 33% of teens were subject to some sort of cyber-bullying.

January 20, 2008 – the Boy Scouts of America's 2008 edition of The Boy Scout Handbook addresses how to deal with online bullying. A new First Class rank requirements adds: "Describe the three things you should avoid doing related to use of the Internet. Describe a cyberbully and how you should respond to one."

January 31, 2008 – KTTV Fox 11 News based in Los Angeles put out a report about organized cyber-bullying on sites like Stickam by people who call themselves "/b/rothas".[123] The site had put out report on July 26, 2007, about a subject that partly featured cyberbullying titled "hackers on steroids".

June 2, 2008 – Parents, teens, teachers, and Internet executives came together at Wired Safety's International Stop Cyberbullying Conference, a two-day gathering in White Plains, New York and New York City. Executives from Facebook, Verizon, MySpace, Microsoft, and many others talked with hundreds about how to better protect themselves, personal reputations, children and businesses online from harassment. Sponsors of the conference included McAfee, AOL, Disney, Procter & Gamble, Girl Scouts of the USA, WiredTrust, Children’s Safety Research and Innovation Centre, KidZui.com and others. This conference was being delivered in conjunction and with the support of Pace University. Topics addressed included cyberbullying and the law, with discussions about laws governing cyberbullying and how to distinguish between rudeness and criminal harassment. Additional forums addressed parents’ legal responsibilities, the need for more laws, how to handle violent postings of videos be handled, as well as the differentiation between free speech and hate speech. Cyberharassment vs. cyberbullying was a forefront topic, where age makes a difference and abusive internet behavior by adults with repeated clear intent to harm, ridicule or damage a person or business was classified as stalking harassment vs. bullying by teens and young adults.

August 2012 – A new organized movement to make revenge porn illegal began in August 2012. It is known as End Revenge Porn. Currently revenge porn is only illegal in two states, but the demand for its criminalization is on the rise as digital technology has increased in the past few generations. The organization seeks to provide support for victims, educate the public, and gain activist support to bring new legislation before the United States Government.

In 2006, PACER.org created a week long event that was held once a year in October. Today, the campaign is a monthlong event and is now known as the National Bullying Prevention Awareness Month.

Canada
Originated in Canada, Anti-Bullying day is a day of celebration for those who choose to participate wearing a symbol of colours (Pink, Blue or Purple) as a stance against bullying. A B.C. teacher founded the Stop A Bully movement, which uses pink wristbands to represent the wearer's stance to stop bullying.

Pink Shirt Day was inspired by David Shepherd and Travis Price. Their high school friends organized a protest in sympathy for a Grade 9 boy who was bullied for wearing a pink shirt. Their stance from wearing pink has been a huge inspiration in the Great Vancouver Mainland. "We know that victims of bullying, witnesses of bullying and bullies themselves all experience the very real and long term negative impacts of bullying regardless of its forms - physical, verbal, written, or on-line (cyberbullying)".

The ERASE (Expect Respect and A Safe Education) is an initiative started by the province of British Columbia to foster safe schools and prevent bullying. It builds on already-effective programs set up by the provincial government to ensure consistent policies and practices regarding the prevention of bullying.

Community support
A number organizations are in coalition to provide awareness, protection and recourse for the escalating problem. Some aim to inform and provide measures to avoid as well as effectively terminate cyberbullying and cyberharassment. Anti-bullying charity Act Against Bullying launched the CyberKind campaign in August 2009 to promote positive internet usage.

In 2007, YouTube introduced the first Anti-Bullying Channel for youth, (BeatBullying) engaging the assistance of celebrities to tackle the problem.

In March 2010, a 17-year-old girl named Alexis Skye Pilkington was found dead in her room by her parents. Her parents claimed that after repeated cyberbullying, she was driven to suicide. Shortly after her death, attacks resumed. Members of eBaums World began to troll teens' memorial pages on Facebook, with the comments including expressions of pleasure over the death, with pictures of what seemed to be a banana as their profile pictures. Family and friends of the deceased teen responded by creating Facebook groups denouncing cyberbullying and trolling, with logos of bananas behind a red circle with a diagonal line through it.

In response and partnership to the 2011 film Bully, a grassroots effort to stop cyberbullying called The Bully Project was created. Their goal is "sparked a national movement to stop bullying that is transforming children's lives and changing a culture of bullying into one of empathy and action."

Notable cases
Teens in the United States
13-year-old Zoe Johnson from Wyoming, Michigan committed suicide in July 2015. Johnson had been a victim of cyberbullying for years and suffered from mild depression. It is believed that a message posted on her Facebook the day before her suicide may have been the turning point that pushed her towards suicide. After her death, people continued to post messages on her Facebook with one person posting the message "good ur gone".

14-year-old Carla Jamerson from Las Vegas, Nevada committed suicide in 2015. She was a victim of cyberbullying for years. Jamerson went to both the city and school police, but did not receive any help. After not receiving any help, she hanged herself.

Bullying of climate scientists and activists
As of 2011 and 2012, climate scientists and climate activists were being confronted with abusive emails from all over the world. These emails were sometimes sent in response to public statements that merely reported findings related to the widely accepted anthropogenic climate change and its consequences. Such emails were sent in response to suggestions posted on climate denial websites, which are effectively requests to engage in cyberbullying. Climate scientists and climate activists were also confronted with libelous Internet reports that aimed to silence them or destroy their reputations.

Sweden
In 2013, two Swedish teenage girls were convicted by the Swedish court in Gothenburg for writing derogatory, explicit remarks next to the pictures of 38 youngsters, mostly girls, via an anonymous Instagram account. They were found guilty and sentenced to youth care and youth service as well as rioting at two schools.

Sino-French JV to develop giant cargo airship

GUANGZHOU - A leading Chinese aviation company will partner with a French firm todevelop giant airships for heavy-weight air cargocompany sources said Friday.
China Aviation Industry General Aircraft Co Ltd (AVICwill invest in French start-up FlyingWhalesfor its competence in designmanufacturingsales and servicingon thedevelopment of a new airship code-named LCA60T, the sources saidciting an agreementsigned by the two sides ThursdayThe amount of investment was not disclosed.
LCA60T, touted as the world's largest airshipcould radically change global aerial cargotransportationGu Biaodeputy director of AVIC Research Institutepredicted that LCA60Twould "revolutionizethe transportation sector and would be in high demand.
Earlier foreign media reports disclosed that the 140 to 150 meter-long LCA60T, which will becapable of carrying 60 tons of cargowill probably be unveiled in 2019.
Flying Whales executive CEO Sebastien Bougon said he hoped the Chinese engineers wouldjoin the project as soon as possible as their experience would be invaluable to the remainingobstaclesespecially safety issues.

JKLF Chief Yasin Malik shifted to SKIMS for treatment

SRINAGAR:
 Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF) Chairman Muhammad Yasin Malik was referred to SKIMS Soura for advanced treatment by the team of medicos of Khyber Hospital here on Saturday.

Hours after protests were held at Maisuma, demanding medical aid for him, the incarnated leader was shifted to Khyber hospital on Saturdayevening.
Sources told KNS that the health condition of Malik was observed by a team of medicos at the private hospital.
“He has undergone various tests in this hospital. His arm has been infected. He was advised by doctors to undergo a surgery. He was referred to SKIMS Soura,” said sources.

Leadership of PMAP and JUI(F) need to set aside personal agendas and support the FATA-KP merger

For the past few months, the mainstreaming of the Federally Administrated Tribal Areas (FATA) has been a very hot issue in the political realms of the country. The 12th point also deals with the reforms in FATA and, in this regard, the Parliamentarians from FATA submitted FATA Reforms Bill in the National Assembly and demanded the merger of FATA with KP. The bill has its supporters as well as detractors, both from within and outside of the tribal areas.

Within FATA, there are three different schools of thought on the issue. The first school of thought, which includes representatives of the area, is in favour of the integration of the tribal areas with Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. The second school of thought demands a separate province for the people of the area. And the third one wishes to have an autonomous tribal council. However, a majority of the tribal people are in favor of merging FATA with Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

On November 8, 2015, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif formed a five-member committee to finalise reforms in the tribal areas. The committee, under the supervision of the advisor to the Prime Minister on Foreign Affairs, Sartaj Aziz, presented the FATA Reforms Report to Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and to the National Assembly. According to the committee’s report, the FCR will be replaced by local or “rewaj” system and FATA will be merged into KP within 5-10 years. All the political parties including the ruling PTI is in favor of merging FATA with KP. However, while discussing the bill in the National Assembly, the chairman of Pukhtoonkhwa Milli Awami Party (PMAP), Mr. Mehmood Khan Achakzai and Jamiat Ulema Islam (F) leader, Maulana Fazal-ur-Rehman, rejected the report of the committee and demanded referendum in the Tribal Areas.

Both these parties and their leaders call themselves the true representatives of Pashtuns then why are they opposing the reforms in FATA? In the case of Achakzai, one can understand that he and his party do not have strong roots in FATA and KP. But why JUI (F) and its leader Maulana Fazal-ur-Rehman are opposing the merger of FATA with KP is baffling. If we look at the political history of FATA, from the general election of 2002 to the general election of 2013, JUI (F) has always won a majority of seats in FATA. One of the most important reasons behind this is that JUI (F) always uses religion as a tool during their election campaign.

During the general election of 2002, the conglomeration of all religious parties, MMA, won seven seats out of 12 from FATA. This result shows the strength of religious parties in the Tribal Areas. I wonder where these leaders were when the government was putting together the FATA Reforms Committee and why they did not criticize the nomination of the Reforms Committee. I also wonder why JUI (F) and PMAP are opposing the merging of FATA with KP and wants to hold a referendum in FATA. Being a resident of FATA and a staunch supporter of the merger of FATA and KP, I can say that holding a referendum is a wastage of time and money. This is because half of the population of FATA is living outside FATA in IDP camps in different parts of the country. Secondly, more than 20% of the population has been living outside the country that has left for earning bread for their families. In the absence of half of the population of the area, a referendum is meaningless and a wastage of time.

There must be some reasons why these two parties want referendums in FATA instead of merging into KP – particularly for the JUI (F).

First, JUI (F) and its leadership is worried about their political decline in FATA and KPK.  They know that time has changed and new political parties are emerging in these areas, which is why they are not in favour of merging FATA into KP.

Second, they know that PTI is becoming popular day-by-day, especially among the youth and the educated community, which is a big threat for JUI (F) in FATA and KP. This is a big challenge for both religious and nationalist parties in FATA and KP.

And the last – and the least – reason could be that JUI (F) is worried that if FATA is merged with KP their seats in the Senate will be reduced, because the party won most of their seats in the Senate from FATA.

The Reforms Committee has suggested that the merger take place within 5 to 10 years, which is too long. Whatever the demands and suggestions of the political parties who are opposing the merger, the report of the Reforms Committee has now presented a very big opportunity to merge FATA with KP, as soon as possible, without any delay. The merging of FATA with KP will bring peace and prosperity to FATA and to the whole country.

Profile: Questioning history itself

“I cannot teach anybody anything. I can only make them think.” — Socrates
Visualise going to school one morning and not finding your regular teacher in the classroom. Instead you are introduced to a new person who tells you it is going to be an unusual day today.
“Would any two of you like to come forward to quarrel?”
You look at your classmates quizzically. Ordinarily you would be banished from class if you indulged even in a mild altercation.

Qasim Aslam, co-founder of The History Project is radically changing the way we teach history


But then who would pass up this godsent opportunity? Several hands shoot up. Two lucky mates are chosen who eagerly go for it. You hope they have a fist-fight, throw things at each other but your thoughts are interrupted.
“Why are they squabbling?” the trainer asks.
“Maybe it’s about lunch.”
“Or something to do with a mobile phone.”
“It definitely has to do with a girl,” a smart-aleck pipes in, eliciting laughter in the class.
Everyone thinks out aloud volunteering diverse reasons.
“If you guys can’t agree on what you just saw then how do you expect a historian to write about the only truth from a time he wasn’t even alive?” asks the non-conventional trainer. Stillness descends in the classroom as schoolkids ponder over the thought.
“This is one of the activities we do in our five-week course in which we teach students how to question history, how to let go of the notions of a rigid right and a rigid wrong,” says Qasim Aslam, the 29-year-old co-founder of The History Project (THP).
We were supposed to meet at 2pm but he WhatsApps me the Google map of our meeting place — not a resident of Karachi, he wants to ensure he has the venue correctly “mapped out” — at 12:30pm confirming the address. He has wrapped up a meeting with the management of a school and requests if I can come earlier “otherwise I’m armed with technology, so wouldn’t mind sitting there and working.”
This particular cafe I have chosen is often quiet since it is not a favourite haunt anymore with newer ones elbowing it out, but not today. When I reach half an hour earlier than the initial fixed time the place inside is nearly packed with a boisterous group of girlfriends and several young and middle-aged men having lunch. Changing the venue is not an option as restaurants and cafés nearby are likely to be more raucous.
Ah, if only Google could develop a restaurant app to find quiet eateries.
Of medium-height and attired like a corporate executive — light blue shirt, khaki pants, dark brown leather laptop bag — Qasim greets me warmly but sounds weary. This is understandable as he has been in Karachi for the past few days and his schedule has been packed with back-to-back meetings.

“You can make anybody ‘us’ and you can make anybody ‘other’ because of these frameworks,” Qasim adds while squeezing the small mineral water bottle adding to the din in the café.


We seat ourselves at a small low table at a distance from the noisy bunch. But then a few minutes into our conversation the staff behind the counter amps up the milkshake machine. Unfazed by the barrage of noise, Qasim is eager to discuss THP.
“We also touch upon the Partition of Bengal in 1905, he says, giving me another example of TPH’s work. “In Pakistani textbooks it is portrayed positively, benefiting the Muslim population, whereas in Indian textbooks it is described as a deliberate split of Hindu-Muslim communities who had united to remove the British Empire from its homeland. He often speaks in an English-Urdu amalgam. Tou jab ek part kaata tou Hindus minority main ho gaye tou [when one part was cut off Hindus became a minority so] naturally Indian textbooks talk about their part. Pakistani textbooks talk about hamarawala [our] part jis main Muslims majority main ho gaye thay [where Muslims came to be in majority].”
An important tool through which THP teaches participants to question historical narratives is through the book Partitioned Histories: The Other Side Of Your Story, which Qasim takes out from his laptop bag handing it to me to flip through. Launched early this year, the illustrated hardcover is unique in its concept for it places Indian and Pakistani textbook narratives side by side. The content is drawn from textbooks currently in use in schools in Pakistan’s Punjab and in Maharashtra in India. Divided into 16 chapters, it spans the history of the independence struggle leading up to Partition from 1857 to 1947.
Zaheer Kidvai is an adviser at Beaconhouse National University, Lahore, and vouches for the book and THP. “I first met them at the World of Tomorrow Festival organised by the School of Leadership,” he recalls. “I read their book, finishing it in two and a half hours, and got in touch with them about introducing their course to Beaconhouse. Look, Professors A.H. Nayyar and Pervez Hoodbhoy have been talking about these things for a long time but to have Indian and Pakistani viewpoint side by side has never been done before. The philosophy behind the project is very good — the essence of which is to question everything. Children are not allowed to do so at home and the mullah says it is a sin.”
However to get to this stage the journey began sometime in 2011 when Ayyaz Ahmad, the other founder of THP, and Qasim were cribbing about society in general and rising intolerance. A graduate of Lahore University of Management Sciences, Qasim was working full time in the corporate sector (that explains the corporate attire) and Ayyaz had just returned to Pakistan after completing his MBA degree from Cambridge University and was involved in his family’s publishing business.
Both first got to know each other when they met in 2004 at a summer camp in Maine in the US, run by Seeds of Peace. The camp brings youngsters from India and Pakistan as well as Israel and Palestine to work together, suggesting solutions to resolve conflicts in their region.
“One of the areas we [wanted to] look into was history textbooks, how they breed a certain framework at a very young age which manifests in different ways in our society,” says Qasim. “You can make anybody ‘us’ and you can make anybody ‘other’ because of these frameworks,” he adds while squeezing the small mineral water bottle adding to the din in the café.
One of the initial challenges the Lahore- and Mumbai-based project faced was who would author and supervise the book. “So three years ago we sent out calls asking people to join us. The response was great. We got a bunch of Indian and Pakistani expats from different parts of the world volunteering to help us out.”
That group of expats is a hefty lot: Taymiya R. Zaman, associate professor of history at the University of San Francisco, Al Jazeera journalist and Harvard-educated Nur Ibrahim, who authored chapters from the Pakistan perspective, lawyer Sanaya Patel who has written chapters in Partitioned Histories from the Indian perspective; and heritage conservationist Prathima Muniyappa, among many others.
All this sounds heartening, even idealistic. After all which rational person wouldn’t desire a better understanding of their neighbour, leading to empathy, peace and normalisation of relations. But given decades of animus and the recent heightened tensions between India and Pakistan, it surely must not have been easy for them to convince parents and schools to allow their children to participate in the course, I wonder. “Parents are concerned about the Indian content,” Qasim acknowleges. “For schools the biggest concern is someone might pick out something from the book and say ‘now schools have started to teach Indian history’.”
The solution they offer is to replace it with case studies of apartheid or the China-Japan fracas or any other conflict. At the end of the day, Qasim and Ayyaz (to whom I speak on the phone later) emphasise that they want students to critically think and challenge narratives in order to behave empathetically towards each other, leading to tolerance in society, which in their opinion is rapidly being depleted. “It is important to understand where one’s emotions and beliefs are coming from,” says 27-year-old Ayyaz. “If someone has a completely different point of view it is important to be able to tolerate it.”
This is done through activities in which students are shown how to analyse information and question things through the five Ws: ‘who, what, where, when and why,’ prompting better questions.
What about the sustainability of the project? Will it fizzle out as some well-intentioned projects have in the past, I ask Ayyaz. “We were also concerned about this aspect,” he says. That is why THP is a for-profit organisation and is a source of livelihood for people who are working for it. Students who enroll in the programme have to pay for it. Besides, we have one simple rule. The market itself will validate the product. If it fulfills a need in the market THP will be sustainable.”
As the conversation draws to a close, I ask Qasim one final question. What is the next line of action? “We have started with five cities in Pakistan and India targeting 1,000 schools within a span of two years. Afterwards we want to launch it in 20 cities and in other countries.”
It is quite evident they have worked it all out and I think, rather I wish, if only India and Pakistan, and all other conflict-riddled zones, could work out their differences so earnestly and methodically. With this sanguine view I walk out of the café, which has become quieter, while Qasim waits for a cab to take him to his next destination.

Banned BRA commanders surrender, vow to fight for Pakistan

 Two commanders of banned militant organization, Baloch Republican Army (BRA) who along with their other 41 militant colleagues surrendered said that self-exiled Baloch leader, Brahamdagh Bugti misguided them.

They vowed to remain loyal to Pakistan rest of the lives. Two commanders of banned militant outfit, BRA including Qaisar Khan Bugti and Lal Khan Bugti along with their 41 militant colleagues surrendered here at Frontier Corps Balochistan Sibi Scouts Headquarters on Saturday and vowed to remain loyal to Pakistan.

Speaking to journalists, they said that self-exiled Baloch leader, Brahamdagh Bugti misguided them.

“Brahamdagh Bugti misguided us in the name of freedom movement,” they said, adding that they decided to leave BRA after Brahamdagh applied for asylum in India.

They said that those were foreign agents who applied for asylum in India.

“Now, we are standing by Pakistan Army and we will fight to defend Pakistan,” they vowed.

The ceremony was attended by MNA and tribal elder, Mir Dostain Khan Domki, Sector Commander, FC, Brig. Amjad Ali, Commandant FC, Col. Zulfiqar Bajwa, Deputy Commissioner Sibi, Saifullah Khetran, Deputy Commissioner Kachhi Bolan, Ali Aijaz, SSP, Sardar Hasan Musakhel, District Chairman, Malik Qaimduddin Dahpal, Municipal Chairman, Haji Daud Rind and others.

Nusrat Bhutto Mather-e-Jamhoriat

Begum Nusrat Bhutto is the legacy of the past, today belongs to us”. These were the unfortunate remarks of one of the party leaders that he expressed on the occasion of Begum Nusrat Bhutto’s first death anniversary, and in fact he was against holding such a commemorating event. This shows his depth of mind and caliber and thinking. In fact, this remark is the negation of Begum Bhutto’s great sacrifices, sufferings, and struggles against the tyrannical and dictatorial rule of General Zia. In today’s time, some of the leaders are so absorbed in their so-called fame that they are willing to conveniently ignore the contributions of Begum Bhutto towards democracy and her fight against the martial law. In their ignorance they hold such views about the great brave lady, whose remarkable leadership qualities deserve respect and recognition.

Tomorrow will mark the 5th death anniversary of the Mather-e-Jamhoriat, Begum Nusrat Bhutto. No doubt, she was awarded the greatest award of the nation, Nishan-e-Pakistan, in recognition of her services for the cause of democracy. But the action of today’s PPP leader is conspicuous of his motives to bury the name of Begum Bhutto in the annals of history and it is his endeavour not to remember her any more. But he and others who share this view must not forget that she has mixed her sweat and blood to pave the way for democracy in this country; her contributions cannot be forgotten even if a few people wish so. Zulfikar Ali Bhutto shaheed wrote to Mir Murtaza Bhutto from his death cell, “In this crisis, and it has been the worst seen by u, your mother and sister have been shining pillars of strength. It would have been very difficult, I would say it would have been impossible, to be without their splendid and heroic contribution”. Indeed, Begum Bhutto has rendered invaluable services for the restoration of democracy.
It is a fact, that it was Nusrat Bhutto who stood all alone against Zia’s tyrannical rule and fought bravely. She faced cruelties, prisons, and tortures including baton charge in Gaddafi Stadium Lahore due to which she had to be admitted in UCH, Lahore. Her strength inspired the workers who also displayed exemplary courage and faced all sorts of cruelties including torture, prison, lashes, and hangings. This is how history was written and made.
The sacrifices made by the party workers are due to the leadership of Nusrat Bhutto. She developed strong relationship with party workers and highlighted the atrocities of the martial law regime in Pakistan and made the whole world aware o the draconian cruelties faced by the people of Pakistan who were struggling for the rule of law and democracy in the country. She also brought to limelight the injustices, barbaric laws and unconstitutional acts of General Zia and started the struggle throughout the country and abroad. Most of the workers went to prisons, some were hanged and many received lashes. The slogan of jiyaye Bhutto was the order of the day. But the love of their leader could not be taken from their hearts and mind. These workers upheld the banner of democracy, freedom, and human rights.
The greatest achievement of Begum Nusrat Bhutto was that she guided Benazir Bhutto in such a way that she became a brave daughter and was not scared of persecution by the dictator that included prison and house-arrests. She could not be defeated by all such difficulties and ultimately she became the great leader of PPP. By following in the foot-steps of her father she wrote the chapters of the history of Pakistan in blood. She faced prison sentences along with her mother and became the voice of her father against the false murder case and the whole world denounced General Zia and his regime. The voice that Mather-e-Jamhoriat had raised for the sake of economic prosperity and democracy was further strengthened by Benazir Bhutto and is the fruit of that struggle in which PPP was successful. The moment when Benazir Bhutto sworn in as the Prime Minster of Pakistan also witnessed the tears in the eyes of Begum Sahiba, reflecting her true thoughts; finally, the people of Pakistan had settled the score of the “judicial murder” and injustices done to Zulfikar Ali Bhutto.
Despite lacking political support from important stalwarts of PPP, she had great confidence in the people of Pakistan and in the party workers and through these means she helped to strengthen the party. She gave a new life and blood to the PPP, which was the inheritance of ZAB Shaheed, in the most difficult times. Had she not come out in the field, General Zia would have been successful in liquidating the party altogether. It was Begum Bhutto’s efforts that prevented Zia’s dream from becoming a nightmare for Pakistan.
Begum Nusrat Bhutto shared the grief of the poor masses. She was a source of enthusiasm and great comfort for them. She was a kind hearted soul who became the voice of the poor people of Pakistan at a time when their voices were being strangled. She not only faced the pain of losing her husband but she also suffered immensely from witnessing the loss of her two sons and eventually, her daughter. Yet, her courage did not waver. No doubt, some new leaders are not aware of the struggles and services of Begum Nusrat Bhutto and are now considering that she is the legend of the past. Such people themselves are opportunists and time servers who will be left behind in the past. Those sincere to the PPP are aware of the sacrifices and contributions of Mather-e-Jamhoriat and will remember her as a brave leader of the PPP.
Today, the leadership of PPP is headed by Bilawal Bhutto, the Chairman of PPP and it is expected that he will uphold the flag of democracy while remembering the services and sacrifices of Mather-e-Jamhoriat. Bilawal Bhutto not only has the capability but is also the fortunate one to have the training of a mother like Benazir Bhutto. His recent political rally in Karachi has demonstrated his potential. I believe that if young Bhutto takes careful steps to reorganise the party, the future of PPP is still bright.
Had she not come out in the field, General Zia would have been successful in liquidating the party altogether. It was Begum Bhutto’s efforts that prevented Zia’s dream from becoming a nightmare for Pakistan.