ISLAMABAD: The Isla­mabad High Court (IHC) on Wednesday issued not­ices to the federal government, Pakistan Tele­com­munication Authority (PTA) and Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Autho­rity (Pemra), seeking a comprehensive report by March 3 on measures to regulate minors’ access to social media.

Justice Arbab Muham­mad Tahir directed the res­pondents to submit para-wise comments highlighting age-verification mechanisms, progress on est­­­ablishing the Social Media Protection and Re­­gulatory Authority, draft regulatory measures and enfor­cement steps against non-compliant platforms.

Observing that “the well-being and safety of children from online harm are of paramount importance”, the court noted that unregulated social media exposes minors to cyberbullying, mental health issues, privacy violations and harmful content.

The constitutional petition was filed by 12-year-old Akbar Khan Shinwari through his father and co­­u­­nsel, Afzal Khan Shin­wa­­ri, under Article 199, seeking a prohibition on social me­­dia use for children below 16 years.

The petitioner cited Aus­­tralia’s Online Safety Am­­endment Act 2024 ba­­nning under-16s from social med­ia, France’s January 2026 legislation prohibiting ac­­cess for those under 15, No­­rway’s age raise from 13 to 15, Malaysia’s upcoming July 2026 ban with eKYC verification, Denmark’s proposed restrictions and UK requirements for “highly effective” age che­c­­­ks. Reference was also ma­­de to European Parl­ia­ment recommendations ban­­ning infinite scrolling for minors.

Published in Dawn, February 12th, 2026