Pakistan’s new Data Rules let you Check who accessed Your Personal Info
Why this matters: local context for readers following news across Pakistan and the region.
ISLAMABAD – Imagine being able to ask the government who accessed my personal information, and why? The answer was largely out of reach until now, as Pakistan is set to change rules with new National Data Governance Policy that promises transparency, stronger privacy protections, and, for the first time, gives citizens the right to see how their personal data is being used across government institutions. A new National Data Governance Policy that recognizes government-held data as national asset while granting citizens unprecedented rights over their personal information. Ministry of Information Technology and Telecommunication, the policy introduces a nationwide framework for the collection, storage, sharing, protection, and disposal of government data. It applies to all federal ministries, departments, statutory bodies, public-sector organizations, and private contractors or partners handling government information. One of key features of policy is expansion of citizens’ rights over the personal data maintained by government institutions. For the first time, individuals will have the right to know what personal information is held about them, who has accessed their records, when the access occurred, and the reason behind it. Citizens will also be able to request corrections to inaccurate or incomplete records, seek removal of personal data in specified circumstances, and get their information in machine-readable formats. The government agencies will be required to establish accessible complaint and redress mechanisms to address data-related grievances. The policy is a shift in government’s approach to public data. Rather than treating information as property of individual departments, it defines government institutions as custodians responsible for safeguarding data on behalf of citizens. Agencies will be required to ensure data accuracy, maintain strong security standards, process information lawfully, and enable controlled data sharing across the pub