Lawsuit against The Atlantic fuels press freedom concerns Meera walkout puts focus on Irshad Bhatti's interview ethics One article, no newsroom: Viral piece sparks debate on Pakistan media From regulation to resignations: Pakistan's media fault lines Asia press freedom: A week of pressure and progress Five reasons slow news days strengthen journalism Press freedom review: Detentions, digital control, and industry upheaval Chilling effect in media: The unseen pressure behind newsroom decisions South Asia sees 250 media rights violations in a year Media coverage of violence against women falls sharply globally Attack on Assamese newspaper deepens press safety concerns London arrests over Iran International attack The JournalismPakistan Global Media Brief | Edition 16 | April 17, 2026 Jahanzaib Haque takes helm as Nukta chief editor Khaleej Times at 48: A legacy newspaper navigating the digital age Lawsuit against The Atlantic fuels press freedom concerns Meera walkout puts focus on Irshad Bhatti's interview ethics One article, no newsroom: Viral piece sparks debate on Pakistan media From regulation to resignations: Pakistan's media fault lines Asia press freedom: A week of pressure and progress Five reasons slow news days strengthen journalism Press freedom review: Detentions, digital control, and industry upheaval Chilling effect in media: The unseen pressure behind newsroom decisions South Asia sees 250 media rights violations in a year Media coverage of violence against women falls sharply globally Attack on Assamese newspaper deepens press safety concerns London arrests over Iran International attack The JournalismPakistan Global Media Brief | Edition 16 | April 17, 2026 Jahanzaib Haque takes helm as Nukta chief editor Khaleej Times at 48: A legacy newspaper navigating the digital age
Logo
Janu
Journalism's silent partners

Axact serves notice on Pak Tea House blog

 JournalismPakistan.com |  Published: 19 May 2015

Join our WhatsApp channel

Axact serves notice on Pak Tea House blog
Axact has served a legal notice to Pak Tea House for sharing tweets about the allegations of fake degrees. Raza Rumi and his team refuse to take down the content.

ISLAMABAD: Pak Tea House blog, founded by senior journalist Raza Rumi, has been served legal notice by Axact for running tweets off Twitter following The New York Times story Monday that accused the company of selling fake degrees. “You are called upon through the instant notice to immediately take down the links within 24 hours from receipt of this notice and extend an unconditional apology and retraction, for your illegal, defamatory, slanderous and malicious actions, through the same medium,” the notice says. Shortly after the NYT published the article about Axact’s alleged involvement in issuance of fake degrees and diplomas, Pak Tea House compiled some of the reactions to the story on social media, especially off Twitter, on its blog. “If the company (Axact) is aggrieved it should present counter-facts and prove that NYT story is wrong. Instead it has chosen the path of bullying and serving legal notices with threats that they can proceed anywhere,” the Pak Tea House said. A NYT story Tuesday said the publication of the article, “Fake Diplomas, Real Cash: Pakistani Company Axact Reaps Millions,” prompted more than 6,500 responses on Twitter using the hashtag #Axact. Rumi said in one of his tweets that they are not taking down the content from their blog despite threats and legal notice from Axact.

See the legal notice here

Key Points

  • Axact served a notice to Pak Tea House regarding tweets about alleged fake degrees.
  • The notice demands retraction and apology within 24 hours.
  • Pak Tea House compiled social media reactions to The New York Times article.
  • Raza Rumi stated they will not remove the content despite threats.
  • The NYT article sparked significant social media engagement using #Axact.

Ask AI: Understand this story your way

AI Enabled

Dig deeper, ask anything — get instant context, background, and clarity.

Not sure what to choose? Try one of these.

The AI generates results based on your selected options
Your AI-generated results will appear here after you click the button.

Disclaimer: This feature is powered by AI and is intended to help readers explore and understand news stories more easily. While we strive for accuracy, AI-generated responses may occasionally be incomplete or reflect limitations in the underlying model. This feature does not represent the editorial views of JournalismPakistan. For our full, verified reporting, please refer to the original article.

Read Next

Newsroom
Lawsuit against The Atlantic fuels press freedom concerns

Lawsuit against The Atlantic fuels press freedom concerns

 April 21, 2026 Kash Patel's defamation suit against The Atlantic has intensified scrutiny of legal pressures on journalists and raised concerns about press freedom.


Meera walkout puts focus on Irshad Bhatti's interview ethics

Meera walkout puts focus on Irshad Bhatti's interview ethics

 April 20, 2026 Irshad Bhatti's podcast interview with actor Meera drew criticism after he pressed personal topics and Meera walked out, sparking debate over media accountability.


One article, no newsroom: Viral piece sparks debate on Pakistan media

One article, no newsroom: Viral piece sparks debate on Pakistan media

 April 20, 2026 Dan Qayyum's viral article drew one million views in days, igniting debate about independent creators' reach and what it means for Pakistan's newsrooms.


Asia press freedom: A week of pressure and progress

Asia press freedom: A week of pressure and progress

 April 19, 2026 Across Asia, journalists faced growing legal pressure, expanded surveillance and attacks on media outlets, even as a key appointment boosted gender diversity.


Five reasons slow news days strengthen journalism

Five reasons slow news days strengthen journalism

 April 19, 2026 Slow news days give journalists time to verify facts, pursue in-depth reporting, and reduce errors, strengthening overall newsroom accuracy and long-form storytelling.


Popular Stories