Pakistani journalist attacked by police officers

Shaukat Korai, court reporter of News One TV channel   was assaulted in the premises of Sindh High Court (SHC) by Counter Terrorism Department (CTD) officers in Karachi on April 27.

Korai  told Pakistan Press Foundation that he was present in the court for his routine coverage, when CTD officers brought few suspects to Anti-Terrorism Court’s administrative judge Justice Abdul Malik Gadhi.

The journalist started making footage of those suspects whose heads were covered with a black veil. One of the CTD officer came to him and asked the journalist to delete the footage and said you are not allowed to make this footage.

The journalist than replied to the officer that High Court has given us permission to cover the happenings in the premises. The journalist was than surrounded by some other CTD officers, who snatched his cell phone and tried to take journalist to the station. The journalist’s clothes were also torn off by the officers.

The journalist has submitted an application regarding the incident to the SHC Chief Justice Ahmed Ali Shaikh, who has called the DIG CTD, Abdullah Shaikh and the officers to report on the incident.

G.M. Jamali, the President of Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists (PFUJ) has expressed deep concern over the violent attack on Korai and urged the authorities to immediately investigate the matter.

The Karachi Union of Journalists (KUJ) President Hasan Abbas and General Secretary Aajiz Jamali urged the Chief Minister of Sindh Syed Murad Ali Shah and Inspector General of Police, Sindh Dr. Syed Kaleem Imam to immediately hold the officers responsible behind attacking journalist.

 

 

Journalists targeted with coordinated smear campaigns online

KARACHI: Twitter users on Friday raised serious concerns over the increasing weaponisation of social media and online smear campaigns against several Pakistani journalists.

The first series of the malicious hashtag campaigns emerged as the top three Twitter trends in Pakistan on Wednesday. The trends accompanied by scurrilous trolling, misinformation and doctored images targeted Marvi Sirmed, Mubashir Zaidi and Umar Cheema.

According to social network analysis of the trends, the campaign against Marvi Sirmed generated the most tweets (over 11,000) within a span of two hours.

On Friday, seven other journalists were subjected to abuse and defamatory content. They included Saleem Safi, Arshad Waheed Chaudhry and Fakhar Durrani, who were accused of being ‘paid’ or supported by opposition parties.

PM’s focal person calls out institutional failure of FIA

Arshad Waheed Chaudhry, for instance, was criticised after someone accused him of asking a ‘planted’ question to Pakistan Peoples Party chairman Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari. Mr Chaudhry later responded via a tweet that such campaigns showed ‘how bothered they were’.

According to Saeed Rizwan, a social researcher, users populated the hashtags using a structured network. Sharing multiple graphics showing how the network had trended the hashtags, Mr Rizwan spotlighted four major Twitter accounts coordinating with a group of seemingly suspicious accounts.

According to Twitter, the platform prohibits behaviour that encourages others to harass or target specific individuals or groups with abusive behaviour. “This includes, but is not limited to, calls to target people with abuse or harassment online and behavior that urges offline action such as physical harassment.”

However, given the rising trends of abuse on Twitter, journalists and policy workers expressed disappointment over the platform’s inaction against accounts propagating abuse and hurling threats at critical voices.

Television host Ammar Masood termed fake accounts the biggest hurdle to freedom of expression. “Malicious campaign of #abusive #twittertrends against Pakistani journalists. It’s mostly by fake accounts and trolls who r working on a specific agenda. #twitter should take notice of it and expose and remove these fake accounts. They r the biggest hurdle in freedom of expression,” he wrote.

Former MPA Bushra Gohar said that such “cowardly attempts to gag free press won’t succeed”. “The ongoing abusive trends & malicious attacks on journalists in #Pakistan are despicable. Strongly condemn the attacks & stand with the courageous journalists. #Free­PressUnderAttack #DefendFund­amentalFree­doms,” she tweeted.

However, there was no acknowledgement of the smear campaigns from the government or the political circle.

When asked what the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) government was doing to ensure journalist safety online, Prime Minister’s Focal Person on Digital Media Dr Arslan Khalid said such campaigns depicted failure of the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) and the interior ministry. “We strongly condemn the campaigns. Abusive and defamatory behaviour is punishable under the cybercrime law and this should be investigated,” he said while speaking to Dawn.

Mr Khalid, who was the PTI’s social media secretary before assuming office, refuted allegations that the accounts running the campaigns were associated with the PTI. “This is despicable and the party has zero tolerance for abuse,” he said.

When contacted, Human Rights Minister Shireen Mazari was not available for comment.

Action under Peca

Speaking to Dawn, lawyer Waqqas Mir said that the campaigns were a violation of Section 20 of the Prevention of Electronic Crimes Act (Peca) which criminalises, among other things, displaying, exhibiting or transmitting information which one knows to be false and intimidates or harms the reputation or privacy of another.

Section 20 pertains to offence against dignity of a natural person.

“In addition to that, Section 499 of Pakistan Penal Code criminalises defamation while Section 503 of Pakistan Penal Code criminalises intimidation,” he said, highlighting that in order to pursue a case against the campaigns, the content should be reported to the FIA which will investigate a complaint and then register an FIR under these provisions of Peca.

Dawn

PPF condemns attack on journalist in Kabul

Pakistan Press Foundation (PPF) in a letter to Ashraf Ghani, President of Afghanistan has expressed concern over the attack on journalist and editor-in-chief of 1TV Abdullah Khejani by the Presidential Protection Guards (PPS) on April 22 in Kabul.

PPF Secretary General Owais Aslam Ali in his letter has denounced the attack on a senior journalist and urged the Afghan authorities to immediately investigate the matter and held accountable those responsible behind attacking a journalist.

According to Afghanistan Journalists Center (AFJC), Khejani was beaten up and briefly detained by the guards at the Government Media Information Center (GMIC) where he was invited to attend and cover the off the record meeting.

The journalist was than barred from attending the meeting and his cellphone was also forcibly seized and checked by the guards.

Meanwhile, the presidential officials apologized over the assault on serious journalist by the PPS guards.

Press freedom hero

IF evidence of the perils of being a journalist in Pakistan today were still needed, the IPI’s Press Freedom Hero Award for this year provides it — resoundingly so.

Dawn’s Cyril Almeida has endured an over two-year long campaign both overt and insidious, conducted with the express objective of silencing him, even if it put his life at risk.

Since October 2016, when he reported on civil-military differences over tackling militancy in the country, Mr Almeida has been put on the ECL twice and subjected to relentless legal harassment through frivolous petitions, with charges of treason against him (the trial is ongoing).

Alongside that, there are threats of physical violence against him and relentless character assassination on social media.

But for a Pakistani journalist to be given this prestigious award by an association of print, broadcast and digital media professionals in nearly 100 countries, also has wider implications.

Consider the nationalities of some past recipients, and the extent of the unravelling of democracy in Pakistan becomes clear. They include, among others, journalists from Egypt, Syria, Iran, Angola, Ethiopia, Turkey and Russia.

All of them have shown remarkable resilience and integrity in standing up to autocratic regimes, doggedly uncovering state corruption, reporting from theatres of war, etc. Sadly, Pakistan’s once vibrant, questioning media — albeit not without its faults — is largely in retreat, browbeaten into a supine conformity where self-preservation is predicated on self-censorship.

True journalism, the kind that holds power to account, has become a scarce commodity.

As noted by numerous press freedom reports, media persons have been abducted, beaten, arrested on flimsy pretexts, charged with terrorism and maligned as ‘foreign agents’ to destroy their credibility and mislead the public. (An entirely unwarranted, and still pending, FIR against the journalist Shahzeb Jillani accuses him of cyberterrorism.)

And that is not even taking into account the various pressure tactics exerted on media outlets which target their sources of revenue.

Only through a united front can journalism in Pakistan shake off this stranglehold and regain its real purpose.

Dawn

Court reserves order on journalist’s bail plea

KARACHI: A district court on Wednesday res­erv­ed its order on an application seeking confirmation of an interim pre-arrest bail of journalist Shahzeb Ali Shah Jillani in a case involving alleged cyber-terrorism, electronic forgery and giving defamatory remarks about state institutions.

The FIA had booked Mr Jillani in a case registered under sections 500, 109 and 34 of the PPC read with sections 10(a), 11 and 20 of the Pakistan Electronic Crimes Act 2016, on the complaint of Advocate Moulvi Iqbal Haider.

On Wednesday, Mr Jillani appeared before South District and Sessions Judge Imdad Hussain Khoso to seek confirmation of his interim bail.

His counsel, Salman Mirza, denied the allegations levelled by the complainant in the FIR lodged by the FIA.

After hearing the arguments of both the sides, the judge reserved his order, to be pronounced on April 27. He also extended Mr Jillani’s interim bail till then.

Dawn

Dawn journalist Cyril Almeida named IPI’s 71st World Press Freedom Hero

The International Press Institute (IPI) — a global network of editors, media executives and leading journalists in over 100 countries — has named Dawn Assistant Editor Cyril Almeida as its 71st World Press Freedom Hero.

IPI’s World Press Freedom Hero Award honours journalists “who have made significant contributions to the promotion of press freedom, particularly in the face of great personal risk”.

According to a post by the global network, Almeida has been recognised for his “critical” and “tenacious coverage” of civil-military relations in Pakistan.

“Almedia’s scrutiny of the Pakistani military-security complex has made both him and Dawn a target,” the Vienna-based IPI said in its statement.

In 2016, Almeida was briefly placed on the Exit Control List (ECL) after publishing an exclusive storyin Dawn regarding a top-level meeting of civil-military leaders.

The story prompted enormous controversy in Pakistan. Both Almeida and Dawn’s top editor were subjected to a widespread smear campaign and dragged before a tribunal in an effort to force Dawnto reveal its sources, the IPI said.

In 2018, a petition seeking the start of treason proceedings was filed against Almeida and he was again temporarily placed on the ECL after publishing an interview with former prime minister Nawaz Sharif, in which Sharif questioned the progress of the Mumbai attacks trial in Pakistan. Proceedings in the case remain open.

The press freedom watchdog noted that the retaliation against Almeida and Dawn for their journalism comes “amid a rapidly deteriorating environment for the press” in the country.

“The range of threats includes physical attacks on journalists; legal harassment; the widespread disruption of newspaper distribution; and the effective blockading of independent broadcasters,” it said.

Almeida, a Rhodes scholar with a law degree from Oxford University who briefly worked as a lawyer before entering journalism, is IPI’s second World Press Freedom Hero from Pakistan, with Aslam Ali, the former managing director of Pakistan Press International, having been honoured previously.

IPI Executive Director Barbara Trionfi said Almeida has “demonstrated tremendous resolve in tackling – at great risk to himself – deeply contentious issues that are nevertheless of central importance to Pakistan’s democracy”.

“Despite the press freedom crisis engulfing Pakistan, he, and Dawn newspaper, have refused to back down from writing about issues that matter,” she added, urging Pakistani authorities to withdraw all charges against Almeida.

“Bringing treason charges against a journalist for interviewing a former prime minister is as dangerous as it is absurd, and constitutes a gross violation of journalists’ right to disseminate information in the public interest,” Trionfi said.

Also on Wednesday, IPI and International Media Support (IMS) announced the Egyptian news site Mada Masr as the winner of the 2019 Free Media Pioneer Award.

Both awards will be presented during a special ceremony on June 5 in Geneva, Switzerland, during IPI’s annual World Congress and General Assembly.

Dawn

Protest against ‘unjust’ arrest of journalist

Shikarpur – A large number of people belonging to different walks of life took out a protest rally against, ‘what they said’, the unjust arrest of local journalist Mushtaq Sarki here on Monday.

The rally, organised under the auspices of Shikarpur Youth at Lakhi Gate clock tower, was led by Shikarpur Union of Journalists (SUJ) President Sultan Rind, Shikarpur Youth President Adil Jaan Shaikh, and others. The protestors blamed the police for implicating the journalist in false cases, and they termed it a conspiracy against journalists. They demanded that DIG Police Aamir Farooqui and SSP Azfar Mahesar launch an impartial inquiry into the matter; otherwise, they would be forced to continue their protest till acceptance of their demands.

The Nation