Gujarat, and the local police arrested youngsters playing the PUBG mobile game

Gujarat, and the local police also arrested youngsters playing the PUBG mobile game



According to a report by Times of India, ten arrests have been made in cases where college going kids were playing PUBG Mobile in a public place. The Rajkot City Police was on a "special drive" and six students were arrested by sub-inspector N D Damor who were playing PUBG Mobile at hangout spots near Atmiya College 

Why playing PUBG Mobile can get you arrested in Gujarat

Why playing PUBG Mobile can get you arrested in Gujarat


  • PUBG Mobile took the gaming world by storm, having been downloaded 200 million times as on December 2018
  • PUBG Mobile ban by Gujarat state government, the Rajkot police took 10 college students in custody for violation three days ago

Launched in March 2018 in India, PUBG Mobile took the gaming world by storm, having been downloaded 200 million times as on December 2018, according to Tencent Games. However, the game has now been banned in Gujarat.In fact, following the PUBG Mobile ban by Gujarat state government, the Rajkot police took 10 college students in custody for violation three days ago. They were booked under the Indian Penal Code (IPC) 188 and Gujarat Police Act (GPA) 135 but were immediately granted bail. “The youngsters were caught violating the notification and so a legal action was taken against them. They were immediately bailed out and now courts will take a call on the matter," Manoj Agarwal IPS and Commissioner of Police Rajkot City, told Mint.

Eight more people were arrested in Ahmedabad and Himmatnagar from Gujarat since then, according to a PTI report.n PUBG, 100 players are pitted against each other in an open world map. Every players’ virtual character is dropped on a remote island where they can play as lone wolf or team up with other players and hunt down other players. The game is also available on PC, Xbox and PlayStation.

IPC 188 is a minor offence, which is disobedience to any order promulgated by a public servant and punishable with one month imprisonment and fine of ₹200. Section 135 GPA, is an offence when you actually disobey an order which are given for prevention of riots or actions that disrupt public peace. It is punishable with 1 year imprisonment and fine. Both are bailable offences, which is why the youngsters got bail immediately, points out Pavan Duggal, advocate and leading cyberlaw expert.

However, Duggal believes that these are patent abuses of the process of law. “At a time when real criminals go scot free, innocent digital users are being targeted by invoking old antiquated section of law (GPA 135 is from1951 while IPC 188 goes back to 1860) which were never drafted keeping in mind the internet realities. Playing PUBG on mobile doesn’t pose any danger to public order," he adds.

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