Yasmine Mohammed has a message for the mullahs in Pakistan: “Kiss my ass.”

The Arab-Canadian author and human rights activist recently received a notice from Twitter that her posts “violate the law(s) of Pakistan,” so she decided to send a message back to the folks monitoring her posts from the Middle East.

“I got an email from @Twitter about my tweets that violate Pakistani law,” Mohammed wrote.

“1) Im not Pakistani

“2) Ive never been to Pakistan

“3) I don’t plan on ever going to Pakistan

“Guess what the tweets were? The trailer for my book! And a drawing by an Iranian feminist

“4) Kiss my ass, Pakistan”

Mohammed included screenshots of the posts, as well as the letter she received from Twitter on behalf of the Islamic republic.

“Hello @YasMohammedxx,

“In the interest of transparency, we are writing to inform you that Twitter has received a request from Pakistan regarding your Twitter account, @YasMohammedxx, that claims the following content violates the law(s) of Pakistan,” Twitter Legal wrote in an email, which included a link to the referenced posts.

“We have not taken any action on the reported content at this time as a result of this request,” the message read.

“As Twitter strongly believes in defending and respecting the voice of our users, it is our policy to notify our users if we receive a legal request from an authorized entity (such as law enforcement or a government agency) to remove content for their account,” it continued. “We provide notice whether or not the user lives in the country where the request originated.”

For over a year, Twitter has been passing along notices of alleged violations of Pakistani law to users inside and outside of the country, from journalists and human rights activists speaking up about specific issues to others who criticize Islam in general.

In Pakistan, the government is suspected of abducting and murdering several journalists who have criticized the country’s leaders, according to The Diplomat, while critics in the U.S. mostly laugh off the notices.

Some have also called out Twitter for bowing to the brutal regime.

“Last night, I received my THIRD Twitter/Pakistan enforcement notice this year related to my Mo Cartoons posts from FOUR yrs ago,” outspoken conservative Michelle Malkin tweeted last summer. “The tools at Twitter persist in framing sharia pandering as a ‘safety’ measure. Bullcrap. #siliconvalleysharia #freespeech”

Mohammed’s response this week was far from surprising. Her book, Unveiled, is about “How Western Liberals Empower Radical Islam.”

The feminist artwork that triggered the complaint from Pakistan sums up her perspective as Muslim who grew up in the west: a young woman with hair flowing, carrying a hijab tied to a staff like a flag of freedom as she tramples over a bowing mullah.