FCC upholds ban on book imports from certain countries
• Rules govt can limit trade with India, Israel on security, foreign policy grounds • Declares ‘right to read’ fundamental to life under Constitution; warns curbs on knowledge risk intellectual, societal decline • Notes digital access makes book bans increasingly ineffective ISLAMABAD: The Federal Constitutional Court (FCC) upheld the government decision regarding the ban on imports of books from certain countries based on national security and foreign policy grounds, while simultaneously affirming that a “right to read” is a fundamental right essential for life. In a landmark decision, the court drew a careful line between a citizen’s fundamental right and the government’s broad authority over foreign trade and national security. While the ruling strongly affirmed access to knowledge as a core constitutional liberty, it stopped short of striking down the government’s trade ban, preserving its power to block commerce with nations like India and Israel. Headed by Justice Aamir Far...