Government officials scrapped their plans for a weird internet shutdown stunt that was supposed to honor victims from last July. Cultural Affairs Adviser Mostofa Sarwar Farooki spilled the beans on Facebook about canceling the bizarre one-minute blackout idea. The whole thing had been causing arguments behind closed doors since day one. Team members kept changing their minds about whether to keep the program or toss it out completely. Farooki admitted the internet shutdown might have been a terrible mistake from the start.
The adviser thanked people for speaking up against the dumb internet blackout plan. Emergency meetings happened after citizens complained about the stupid idea online. Officials finally came to their senses and decided to kill the program before it could happen. Updated information about the changes will come out soon for everyone to see. Farooki promised that all other July memorial events will still take place as planned.
The government had been flip-flopping on this internet shutdown nonsense for weeks. Large planning teams sometimes miss obvious problems when organizing major events. Public criticism helped push officials toward making the right choice. The cultural affairs team wants everyone to focus on the real meaning behind July commemorations instead.
The adviser thanked people for speaking up against the dumb internet blackout plan. Emergency meetings happened after citizens complained about the stupid idea online. Officials finally came to their senses and decided to kill the program before it could happen. Updated information about the changes will come out soon for everyone to see. Farooki promised that all other July memorial events will still take place as planned.
The government had been flip-flopping on this internet shutdown nonsense for weeks. Large planning teams sometimes miss obvious problems when organizing major events. Public criticism helped push officials toward making the right choice. The cultural affairs team wants everyone to focus on the real meaning behind July commemorations instead.