PPF condemns Russia’s ban on entry of journalist in the country

Pakistan Press Foundation (PPF) in a letter to Dmitry Medvedev, Prime Minister of Russia has expressed concern over the ban on the entry of Ukrainian freelance journalist Alyona Savchuk to Crimea and Russia.

PPF Secretary General Owais Aslam Ali in his letter has called on the Russian authorities and security services to immediately lift ban on Alyona Savchuk and stop targeting journalists in the line of duty.

According to Institute of Mass Information, the Russian federal security service, FSB has banned Savchuk from entering occupied Crimea and Russia for 10 years, till 28 of August 2028. The security service claimed that the journalist poses a threat to Russia’s defense capability, security or public order.

The FSB officers interrogated the journalist for about 40 minutes, took her finger-prints, but did not explain the reason for banning journalist and in what way she is a threat for the security of the Russian Federation.

For several years Savchuk has been reporting the facts of harassment of Crimean Tatars activists and politically motivated trials in Crimea.

 

PFUJ forms NAC to fight for workers’ rights

Three factions of the Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists (PFUJ) on Monday constituted a National Action Committee to fight for the media workers’ rights, including delay in salaries, retrenchment and freedom of the press.

“We will not allow the government and media owners to target the workers,” said the representatives of all the three factions of the PFUJ during a meeting at the Karachi Press Club.

The NAC, comprising president and secretary generals of all three PFUJs, Afzal Butt, Ayub Jan Sarhandi, Rana Azeem, GM Jamali, Nawaz Raza and Sohail Afzal Khan, would meet Prime Minister Imran Khan, the federal information minister, all media owners, APNS, CPNE and PBA to express their concern over the deteriorating situation in the media industry.

The meeting resolved that the present media crisis had threatened the freedom of press and basic, fundamental, economic and labour rights of over 25,000 media workers all over Pakistan.

The Express Tribune 

Human rights through Cinematography Film Festival

Islamabad: Dedicated to the 70th anniversary of Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the opening ceremony of the 4th edition of Human Rights through Cinematography Film Festival was held at Pakistan National Council of Arts, (PNCA) on Sunday. Running from November 25th to December 10th, the film festival is led by the European Union (EU) and the United Nations in partnership with a large number of member states of the EU, Pakistan Institute for Parliamentary Services, Centaurus Cineplex and educational and cultural institutions.

The opening ceremony featured the screening of ‘Freedom for the Wolf,’ an epic investigation into what the filmmaker Rupert Russel terms as ‘illiberal democracies’ and how elected leaders of the new generation are dismantling freedom and democracies as we know it.

After the screening, MNA, Maleeka Bokhari, academic and journalist Harris Khalique and human rights activist Marvi Sirmed participated in a panel discussion moderated by Communication Officer at FAO of the United Nations, Waqas Rafique.

The festival will present twenty seven award winning documentaries on human rights issues from around the world and screenings will be held simultaneously in nine cities of Pakistan, comprising Gujrat, Lahore, Rawalpindi, Multan, Islamabad, Karachi, Peshawar, Charsada and Quetta. The screenings are open to the public.

The festival aims to provide a window to universal human rights challenges to the Pakistani public in general and young audiences in particular and urge them to reflect on solutions. An online campaign to generate debate is also launched by the organisers and can be followed under the hashtag #HRTC2018

Ambassador of the EU, Jean-François Cautain, said, “Arts and Culture in general and documentary films in particular, are increasingly playing an important role for understanding the world and its peoples. The Human Rights through Cinematography Festival, especially with the screenings in universities, is an excellent tool to raise awareness about the different facets of Human Rights and to engage students in constructive debates. The EU stands firm with Pakistan in its efforts for the promotion of Human Rights with special focus on gender equality, freedom of religion and belief, rule of law, access to justice and freedom of expression.”

The News

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PPF condemned the cancellation of RFI correspondent’s accreditation

Pakistan Press Foundation (PPF) in a letter to Alpha Condé, President of Guinea has expressed concern over the cancellation of the accreditation of Mouctar Bah, correspondent of Radio France Internationale (RFI).

PPF Secretary General Owais Aslam Ali in his letter, condemned the decision of regulatory body and considered it an attack on media freedom. PPF urged the authorities and media regulatory body to look into this matter and withdraw its decision.

According to Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA), on November 14, 2018, the media regulatory body Haute Autorité de la Communication (HAC) has taken the decision following the story of Bah on crackdown on the protestors by law enforcement agencies which led to the killing of two protestors and a police officers.

HAC summoned the journalist on November 12, following a complaint filed against him, accused for unbalanced coverage of the protests, specifically about the killings recorded on November 7th and 8th. The Minister of Information and Communication, Amara Somparé filed the complaint.

According to statement of HAC, the journalist was provided a chance to the Ministry of Defense to respond the story before cancelling his accreditation. The statement further added that, “No application for a new accreditation can be considered before the end of February 2019.”

However RFI have challenged and rejected the decision of HAC.

PPF concerned over attack on UNE TV journalist

Pakistan Press Foundation (PPF), in a letter to Juan Orlando Hernandez, President of Honduras has expressed concern over the attack on journalist Mauricio Rivera of UNE TV on November 21.

PPF Secretary General Owais Aslam Ali has urged the authorities to thoroughly investigate this matter and hold those officers responsible for attacking journalist Mauricio Rivera.

According to the Committee for Free Expression (C-Libre), the police and military officers attacked Rivera by throwing tear gas bombs to stop him from coverage in the city of Choluteca in southern Honduras.

Rivera was on a tour while he noticed the large number of police officers near Choluteca Bridge, suppressing the public protesting against the inauguration of a mobile congress of the Legislative Power.

He then decided to cover the incident, when the officers noticed journalist making footage of the happening they surrounded Rivera and attacked him with tear gas bombs.

This is not the first time that Rivera is being attacked, he has been a victim of similar attacks for past two years. He lodged complaints in the Public Ministry and the Unit for the Protection of Journalists and Social Communicators of the Ministry of the Interior, Justice and Human Rights.

 

 

Bleak era for media

There is little doubt that the media in Pakistan is besieged today as it is getting battered by different elements that range from the authorities to the economy.

Supreme Court Justice Faez Isa is not known to mince his words on transgressions of the rule of law and the Constitution. He remarked during a hearing on Thursday that there appeared to be a move to silence the media.

He lamented that “we are now living in a controlled media state” where all points of view, other than the one that powerful elements of the power structure are comfortable with, were not welcomed.

The judge asked if the country’s future was being determined by parliament or, what he called, insidious forces. Justice Faez Isa’s remarks came during the hearing of a suo motu case in the Supreme Court on the Faizabad dharna during the final days of the last government.

The two-member bench, headed by Justice Mushir Alam, expressed shock and dismay that TV news channels were taken off air on someone’s orders by cable operators, and took to task the regulator Pemra for not lifting a finger to ensure the free distribution of news channels on cable networks.

The bench was also displeased by the role of the ISI and demanded that the court be briefed about the exact mandate and role of the all-powerful security service. The court came down hard on the attorney general of Pakistan for not appearing before the court in this matter of import, despite a clear commitment.Many of us know that while the court is a robust backer of freedoms, there are powerful forces determined to make Pakistan a ‘uni-narrative’ state.

All who believe in the freedom of the media would take heart from the remarks of the honourable court. Still, many of us would also know that while the court will be a robust backer of freedoms, there are very powerful forces determined to make Pakistan a ‘uni-narrative’ state.

It is not a very well-kept secret how the media was beaten into submission in the run-up to the elections by agencies, and told in no uncertain terms what was acceptable and what was not. Notwithstanding the odd case of heroic defiance, much of the media content reflected the self-censorship that was enforced on the fourth estate.

Of course, the PTI strategy to blame the slowdown of the economy mostly on the policies of its predecessors — and not even a bit on its own scare-mongering tactics — may have been designed to demonise the PML-N, but it began to cut both ways.

As concerns mounted about the state of the economy, it has also bitten the media, with commercial advertisers holding back their ad spends. This, coupled with the present setup’s refusal to honour the payment for ads the last government placed in the media but did not pay for, has exacerbated the crisis.

Even then, it would be outright dishonest to say that cutbacks and job losses in the media are due to a legitimate market-based financial crunch alone. Many of the senior figures who have lost their jobs/ programmes, for example in TV channels, have often expressed their support for civilian supremacy.

There is no denying that there is a legitimate financial squeeze too, but in many of the decisions it seems more factors are at play than what Information Minister Fawad Chaudhry chooses solely to blame on the ‘financial crunch’.

It does not take rocket science to ascertain the actual situation. Look at the legislative record of the PTI, and the party’s performance in its first 100 days in power, and you will see very few draft laws and regulations presented to parliament or even placed in the public domain for discussion.

But one of the first drafts prepared (almost as if it was handed over to the PTI on assuming office) and floated with the pledge of taking all stakeholders on board was the draft law to club together all media regulatory bodies into one.

The move received a negative reaction from the stakeholders in media, especially working journalists and editors who have viewed it as an insidious attempt to shackle the media via stealth in the shape of regulatory reform.

More recent statements by the information minister, who is seen as close to both the prime minister and other powerful state institutions, have been about also tightening the screws on social media which, after large sections of the traditional media were muzzled, had become a source of information for the public.

As a social media user, I would be the last person to say that the platforms do not lay themselves open to exploitation by purveyors of manufactured news and even propaganda, but this is definitely not to say that such people have an overwhelming presence on it. Far from it.

Even where there is such content, there are ways and means to rubbish it and spell out what the facts are. But it is clear that such use does not scare the authorities.

What unnerves them, it appears, is the use of social media — as, for instance, in the aftermath of Naqibullah Mehsud’s extrajudicial murder and the initial botched investigation which created a rights movement largely via social media. Even then, why the fear? It is not as if justice has been meted out to the perpetrators seen as assets by the state.

At this stage, the PTI might be supporting the muzzling of the media to remain on the ‘same page’ with powerful state institutions, but if Prime Minister Imran Khan desires to drive meaningful change he will need more authority than, say, Shaukat Aziz had while in office. Here the media will prove a solid ally in the long run. One really hopes and wishes he has the vision to see that.

Dawn

Colombian government orders investigation for attacks on RCN Radio

The government of Colombia, in response to the protest letter by Pakistan Press Foundation (PPF), has ordered the authorities to immediately investigate attacks on RCN Radio station in the country’s capital city of Bogotá.

The adviser to the President, Yenevieve Cuervo Mateus has directed the Attorney General Dr. Luis Gonzalez Leon and managing director of National Protection Unit, Dr. Pablo Elias Gonzalez Mongui to take immediate action against the attacks on journalists and media houses and hold those responsible for such acts.

PPF in its letter to the President of Colombia Iván Duque Márquez had expressed concern over the attack on the headquarters of RCN Radio on November 8 and called on the government to investigate the matter and hold those responsible for attacking the radio station.

The station was attacked during the protest demonstrations organized by Bogotá students, demanding an increase in the budget for public institutions. This was the third attack on RCN radio station. In two other incidents on October 11 and 17 demonstrating students attacked RCN damaged the headquarters and harassed the journalists.