Pakistan seems to be caught in a constant movement of one step forward and two steps backwards. Earlier this year, the disappearance of six prominent social activists and bloggers, who were critical of the state and establishment, sent shockwaves through the civil society. Their recovery was a cause of relief. However, the message of their disappearances to the rest of the activist community was hard to miss: quieten or be silenced. Recently, activist and academic Dr Riaz Ahmed was arrested during a protest on the charges of possessing an illegal weapon, allegedly found in his vehicle. Regardless of the dubious charges, it is important to know that the paramilitary force officer on whose complaint the case was registered against Dr Riaz, did not fail to mention that the professor was also ”involved in advocating on Facebook for the release of ‘blasphemous’ bloggers reportedly picked up by law enforcement agencies recently.” The allegations of blasphemy have permanently jeopardised the lives of the recovered bloggers. Now, those who demanded and protested for their release are also being considered tainted, and their lives subsequently endangered. In March, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s Holi address to the Hindu community in Karachi garnered praise from several sections of the society for whom it embodied the progressive acceptance, inclusivity, pluralism, and tolerance that should be at the heart of Pakistan. While the PM’s speech may have ignited a flicker of hope regarding some modicum of a progressiveness in the government’s orientation, Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar was swift to emerge as the moral crusader of the hour, second only to Justice Shaukat Siddiqui of the Islamabad High Court, to snuff it with the threat of blocking all social media sites in the country which host blasphemous content. But relevant to this matter, and to the larger phenomenon of Pakistani political parties’ usual pandering, cavorting and patronizing of the religious right and extremist organisations, is the late Eqbal Ahmad’s incisive analysis in which he wrote: “Pakistan’s is an ideologically ambiguous polity; here, political paeans to Islam have served as the compensatory mechanism for the ruling elite’s corruption, consumerism and cow-towing to the west. As a consequence, the ideologically fervent Islamist minority keeps an ideological grip on the morally insecure and ill-formed power elite. It is this phenomenon that explains the continued political clout of the extremist religious minority even as the electorate has all but repudiated it. Yet, horrors escalate by the day, and neither their original sponsors nor the victims are doing much about it.” However, Chaudhry Nisar’s reported statement in Dawn regarding the social media ban, that “no country can allow religious sentiments to be hurt or top state functionaries to be subjected to ridicule in the pretext of freedom of expression”, is telling of the other objectives the ban would clearly serve. That the “ridicule” of state and government officials can be swept by a ban ostensibly related to religion indicates the enduring convenience of religion as a useful prop for Pakistani politics and the state itself. These threads of incidents and developments tie into the thriving reality of an increasingly and dangerously shrinking space for freedom of expression, criticism, dissent and protest in Pakistan. Activists, students, bloggers, artists, academics, journalists and members of the civil society are steadily being targeted by virulent campaigns or directly arrested on dubious and fictitious reasons. The academic spaces in the country do not have brighter views to offer in this these days either. At Punjab University in Lahore, the Islami Jamiat-e-Talaba once again demonstrated their notorious thuggery on a Pashtun Cultural Day event resulting in clashes and violence. It was later revealed that in the wake of this incident, the Punjab University administration had decided to ban all student programmes and events within the University premises. This beleaguering bodes well for no one. With this march of terror, fear and suppression that draws strength from the standard repertoire of reasons such as religion, “national ideology” and “national security”, it has now become necessary for all concerned citizens to recognize this reality and organize to protect those who fight for our freedoms, and vigorously preserve the spaces and liberties we are entitled to. The drive to homogenise Pakistan’s religious and cultural character, and to monopolise its narratives through exclusivist understandings and actual violence, has long been a project of regressive forces and the responsibility falls on ordinary citizens today to thwart its renewed attempts. Further space and freedoms must not and cannot be conceded in the face of this rising tide of regression, repression and pressure, for there is only more beyond a surrender to them. The author writes on socio-political affairs at hafsakhawaja.wordpress.com