Pakistan’s Telecom Amendment Bill 2026 is going back to the drawing board after Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif formed a high-level review committee to fix its most controversial clauses. The committee, headed by Law Minister Azam Nazeer Tarar, submitted an interim report that calls for clear, explicit language protecting private property rights, and a rethink of the bill’s heavy Rs50 million fines. Here is what happened, why it matters, and what changes are on the table.
Why the Telecom Amendment Bill 2026 Triggered a Crisis
The bill, tabled by IT Minister Shaza Fatima Khawaja, seeks amendments to the Pakistan Telecommunication (Reorganisation) Act, 1996. The government’s stated goal was simple: make it easier and faster to lay fibre cables and install towers across the country. But the bill’s language set off alarm bells almost immediately.
The bill was approved by the National Assembly on June 11 by a majority vote, but was later deferred by the Senate Standing Committee on IT and Telecommunication after being referred on June 15. That is where lawmakers took a close look at the text, and did not like what they saw.
Two clauses caused most of the anger. First, among the most contentious provisions of the bill is a clause under which a property owner’s failure to respond to two official notices would be treated as “implied consent” for telecom installations. In plain words, if you ignored two letters from a telecom company, they could treat your silence as a green light.
Second, critics say Section 27-B would allow telecom companies to lay fibre cables, erect mobile towers, or place equipment on any private property, and impose fines of up to Rs50 million on homeowners, shopkeepers, tenants, or institutions that refuse, delay, or obstruct such access. That is Rs5 crore, a sum far beyond what ordinary Pakistanis could afford.
Senator Palwasha Khan, who chairs the Senate Standing Committee on IT, told Arab News the bill conflicts with Articles 23 and 24 of the Constitution, which protect citizens’ rights to own and use property.
PM Forms Committee as Allies Pull Support
Following reservations raised by PTI over the bill, the PPP, a key ally of the government, also withheld its support, with Senator Sherry Rehman stating that her party would not allow any legislation related to the IT sector, PTA, or right of way to pass through the Senate unless it was thoroughly scrutinised and amended.
With even coalition partners walking away, PM Shehbaz acted fast. The prime minister ordered an urgent review of the Right of Way clauses, establishing a 10-member high-level committee to scrutinise the proposed framework. The committee is headed by Law Minister Azam Nazir Tarar, with members including Senator Sherry Rehman, IT Minister Shaza Fatima Khawaja, Economic Affairs Minister Ahad Cheema, Attorney General Mansoor Awan, and experts in law and IT.
What the Review Committee Found
The committee moved quickly. According to a statement issued by the Ministry of Law and Justice, the committee submitted its interim report after reviewing the bill’s Right of Way provisions and the existing legal framework.
The headline finding was firm: the committee noted that in the case of private property, the consent of the owner and a mutual agreement will be a fundamental condition. The ministry said no action related to the use of or access to private property shall be taken without owner’s consent and mutual agreement.
On the Rs50 million penalty that alarmed so many people, the committee also recommended a review of the amount of the penalty proposed under Section 27B(1) and its alignment with the overall objectives, structure, and provisions of the law. It also recommended that any person aggrieved by the decision of the appropriate government shall have the right to seek recourse before the Telecommunication Appellate Tribunal established under Section 7A of the Pakistan Telecommunication (Reorganisation) Act, 1996.
A draft of the proposed changes will be finalised within one week and submitted for further consideration and directions.
The Bigger Problem the Bill Was Trying to Solve
It is easy to focus on the controversy and miss the real issue driving this legislation. The dispute comes as Pakistan seeks to expand digital infrastructure in a market with more than 207 million mobile and fixed-line subscriptions and 58,423 cell sites. Industry officials have long cited weak network infrastructure as a major obstacle, and only 14 to 19 percent of telecom towers are connected to fibre networks, leaving most users dependent on mobile broadband.
That is a very low fibre rate for a country aiming to grow its digital economy. The Ministry of IT’s pitch is straightforward: Pakistan’s fiberization has been stuck for years because right-of-way charges and unclear access rules slow down every fibre rollout and tower installation. IT Minister Shaza Fatima told the Senate committee that all provinces have now abolished RoW charges, and this bill is meant to lock that change into federal law.
The broader push to expand internet access across Pakistan makes getting the Right of Way framework right even more critical. Better fibre coverage directly helps the millions of Pakistanis who rely on mobile broadband for work, education, and daily life.
The Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) oversees the country’s telecom sector and will play a central role in implementing whatever final version of the bill is passed.
Where Things Stand Now
The interim report seeks to strike a balance between the interests of the government, telecom operators, and the general public by introducing stronger protections for private individuals and ensuring due process before telecom infrastructure can be installed on private property. The committee has recommended legal and procedural improvements to reduce disputes, streamline infrastructure deployment, and support the government’s broader digital connectivity agenda.
The ministry said there would be no compromise on private property rights, owner consent, the right to object, legal safeguards, and compensation. It added that the objective of the Right of Way reforms was to provide better, faster, and more reliable internet services, not to undermine property rights.
For ordinary Pakistanis, the key takeaway is this: the bill does not give telecom companies the right to install towers on private homes. Residential property cannot legally be used for commercial installations under existing Pakistani law, and the amendment does not change that. The amended bill, once finalised, will need to say this clearly on paper.
Any changes agreed by the Senate will send the bill back to the National Assembly for another vote, so the process is not over yet.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Telecom Amendment Bill 2026?
It is a proposed update to Pakistan’s 1996 Telecommunications Act. Its main goal is to make it easier for telecom companies to lay fibre cables and install towers by creating a clearer Right of Way framework. The bill passed the National Assembly in June 2026 but got stuck in the Senate after property-rights concerns emerged.
What is the implied-consent clause that people are worried about?
The most contentious provision is a clause under which a property owner’s failure to respond to two official notices would be treated as “implied consent” for telecom installations. Critics say this effectively removes a citizen’s right to say no simply by not replying to letters. The review committee has now proposed this be removed and replaced with an explicit consent requirement.
Will property owners face a Rs50 million fine for refusing telecom access?
A private individual cannot be fined simply for refusing a request or negotiating terms. The fine only applies where a right of way has already been lawfully agreed and someone subsequently obstructs it. Even so, the review committee has recommended reconsidering the penalty amount and making this restriction crystal clear in the law’s text.
Why does Pakistan need this law at all?
Pakistan has a very low fibre rate. Only 14 to 19 percent of telecom towers are connected to fibre networks, leaving most users dependent on mobile broadband services. Without clearer rules on where companies can lay cables and install equipment, expanding fast internet to more cities and towns stays slow and expensive. The bill aims to fix that, provided the final text also protects citizens’ rights properly.













