PPF concerned over arrest of blogger under Sedition Act

Pakistan Press Foundation (PPF) in a letter to Mahathir Bin Mohamad, Prime Minister of Malaysia has expressed concern over the arrest of blogger Wan Muhammad Azri Wan Deris on November 29.

PPF Secretary General Owais Aslam Ali in his letter has called on the authorities to immediately release the blogger without any charges.

According to Centre for Independent Journalism (CIJ), Wan Muhammad Azri is charged under Sedition Act and is being investigated for posting seditious video, which allegedly hurt racial sentiments.

Wan Muhammad Azri was also charged in the past by the former Leader of the Opposition Anwar Ibrahim, with his award being paid by a branch of the United Malay National Organization (UMNO).

The Cabinet in October 2018, suspended the Sedition Act of 1948- one of two oppressive laws Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad’s Pakatan Harapan coalition vowed to revoke, along with the death penalty, as a part of its reform agenda. The use of this law despite the suspension, is a step back and it gives an impression that there is a continuous need for this colonial piece of legislation.

CIJ added that, the Section 298A of the Penal Code, which prosecutes provocative violence or of hate speech, has a tighter definition of what constitutes a crime.

Human rights priorities

ON Monday, when the nations of the world celebrate the 70th anniversary of the signing of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the Pakistan government too will be expected to not only count what has been done to guarantee the people’s human rights, but also to reflect on what remains to be done.

The first task for the state, for obvious reasons, is to improve its capacity to protect the rights of all citizens to life, liberty and security, especially of the socially and economically weaker sections of society. Quite high still is the number of people who lose their lives due to preventable causes, such as lack of the minimum necessary health cover, road accidents, killing of women for mens’ honour, so-called police encounters and targeting of religious/ ethnic minority communities and sects.

Even the high rates of infant and maternal mortality seem to have been dropped from the list of national concerns. The right to dignity of person is denied to a preponderant majority with near-total impunity for its violators. The labour unions and students and civil society organisations (CSOs) are complaining of extraordinary restrictions on their right to freedom of association. The Exit Control List is being blatantly abused to deny the right to go abroad. Enforced disappearances amount to the denial of all the three basic rights — life, liberty and security. And women and minorities have been kept waiting for years for a fair dispensation. Perhaps the most serious human rights issue today concerns the media’s freedom of expression.

The list of human rights issues that demand attention on a priority basis is quite long. We should like to restrict this discussion to three groups of citizens whose support the state needs for the defence and promotion of human rights and who are receiving a raw deal — CSOs, human rights defenders and the media community.

The travails of CSOs have been in the public debate for years. The authorities have paid little heed to protests and warnings against the banishment of international NGOs, and a concerted drive is on to strangulate national CSOs, in utter violation of the law and constitutional rights. One shudders to think of the harm this myopic policy is going to cause.

The whole world is aware of the role of human rights defenders in promoting respect for human rights in any country. Pakistan especially needs good human rights defenders to help it meet its obligations to its citizens.

A bare reading of the UN declaration on human rights defenders should enable the Pakistan authorities to realise that “everyone has the right, individually and in association with others, to promote and to strive for the protection and realisation of human rights and fundamental freedoms at the national and international levels.” The state must guarantee human rights defenders their right to life, freedom of assembly, freedom of association, freedom of expression, opinion and protest, freedom to access information and to communicate with international bodies, the right to receive funds and the right to an effective remedy.

It is essential to accept as a human rights defender everyone who reacts to human rights violations, reports these to the authorities as a journalist or as an active citizen and strives for redress.

Perhaps the most serious human rights issue today that deserves to be at the top of the government’s agenda is the decline in the media’s freedom of expression and the worsening of its economic prospects.

There was an upsurge of hope in the hearts of many a media person when Prime Minister Imran Khan squarely denounced censorship as a weapon used by weak regimes that wished to hide something while his government believed in complete transparency and had nothing to conceal. It seems he was speaking about some other country or he had not been told of the concerns the media community has been expressing for weeks on end.

These concerns are about the economic crisis in both electronic and print media caused by discriminatory policies. As a result, a large number of journalists from both electronic and print media have been rendered jobless. There are complaints of censorship of a kind never experienced before, and perceptive writers are referring to a bleak future for the media. If media persons are not reliable witnesses in their own cause, their ordeal can be judged from some of the recent reports and comments on their condition.

In September last, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CJP), an international watchdog of sound standing, issued a report expressing concern over the decline in press freedom in Pakistan.

In the same month, the recommendations made to Pakistan after the Universal Periodic Review organised by the UN Human Rights Council included a call to protect independent journalists. Last month, Justice Faez Isa of the Supreme Court was so incensed at official control and management of the electronic media that he is reported to have observed: “You want to make the channels bow down, so that they say what you want them to say. Is this Pakistan? Did we gain independence for this?”

Pakistan is still in the list of countries where the rate of journalists getting killed is quite high. But as a recent report by Freedom Network showed, the state has demonstrated little interest in apprehending the culprits or in prosecuting the few that get caught.

The other day the Council of Pakistan Newspaper Editors expressed its deep concern over the condition of the freedom of the press in the country and said the press was living in a state of extreme suffocation and unnecessary restrictions.

And the entire media is seriously apprehensive of what the proposed regulatory law will hold for it, since the moment voluntary registration of a professional group is replaced with regulation, the curtailment of freedom begins.

Dawn

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PPF express concern over the killing and abduction of media workers

Pakistan Press Foundation (PPF) in a letter to Ashraf Ghani, President of Afghanistan has expressed concern over the killing of a driver of private owned Enikas radio television network and abduction of its owner in eastern Afghanistan.

PPF Secretary General Owais Aslam Ali in his letter has called on the authorities to thoroughly investigate the incident and ensure safe release of Zulmai. PPF also urged to hold the accused responsible for this act.

According to Afghanistan Journalists Center (AFJC), on December 4, an unidentified armed men, with rifles killed the driver and kidnapped Zulmai, engineer and owner of the media outlet who was coming out from the shopping mall in Jalalabad city.

The spokesperson for the Nangarhar governor, Attaullah Khogyani informed that the police is investigating the incident. Khogyani added that the identity of attackers and reason for attack is still unidentified.

In east Afghanistan, Nangarhar is one of the unsafe provinces where both Taliban and Daesh (IS) groups are active.

TV journalist’s murder sparks protests

PESHAWAR – Journalists on Tuesday carried out a rally outside Mardan Press Club against the killing of a media person in Peshawar, as journalists in other parts of the province also staged rallies and protests against the incident.

The protest rally was led by Lutfullah, president Mardan Press Club, Arif Khan, vice president, Riaz Mayar, general secretary and Zahir Shah, president Mardan Chamber of Commerce and Industry (MCCI).

The protesters chanted slogan against killing of the TV journalist and stressed the government to arrest the killers involved in the incident.

On Monday, two gunmen on a motorcycle opened fire on a car in Peshawar’s Sarband area. A journalist identified as Noorul Hassan was killed while his cameraman Sabir was injured in the firing. The journalist belonged to Nowshera and was working as a reporter for a private news channel.

The vehicle was coming from Hayatabad and the incident occurred at Achini Chowk on Ring Road. The injured were shifted to a nearby hospital, where Hassan succumbed to his wounds. Sabir is said to be in a critical condition.  Addressing the protest rally, the speakers strongly condemned the incident and demanded the federal and provincial governments to immediately arrest the killers. The speakers said that the federal and KP governments had failed in ensuring protection to the journalists.

They also stressed the government to announced Shuhada package for the family of deceased journalist. Later, the protesters dispersed peacefully.

Funeral of the slain journalist was held in Jehangira Nowshera on Tuesday. A large number of people, including journalists and area elders attended the funeral.

After the funeral, journalists who had come from different parts of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa staged protest against the target killing of Noorul Hassan. The protesting journalists also staged a sit-in on the GT road. They condemned the killing of their colleague and expressed disappointment over government’s silence over the issue.

Earlier, media persons in Jamrud area of Khyber tribal district also held a protest demonstration against the murder of Noorul Hassan.

The protesting journalists, who gathered outside the press club, stressed the government to provide security to media persons and arrest the culprits involved in the Peshawar firing incident without delay.

The Nation

 

PPF condemns physical attack on journalist in Mali

Pakistan Press Foundation (PPF) in a letter to Soumeylou Boubèye Maïga, Prime Minister of Mali has expressed concern over the physical assault on a journalist in Mali.

PPF Secretary General Owais Aslam Ali in his letter, condemned this brutal attack on a journalist for simply informing public about the performance of Commission. PPF urged the authorities to immediately and independently investigate the matter and hold the Colonel responsible for such vicious act.

According to Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA), Colonel Abdoulaye Makalou, a Malian soldier and secretary general of the Truth, Justice and Reconciliation Commission (CVJR) has physically assaulted and degraded Hamidou Toure El Hadji, managing director of malimedias.com (an online news organization).

Toure was assaulted for criticizing the commission’s lack of results in a Facebook article.

The Colonel summoned Toure to his office on November 29, the editor than requested to meet the officer in a public place instead of his office. Toure’s car however stopped in the mid-way, as he was waiting for his car to get fixed, the Colonel reached on the spot and took him away to his office along with his cousin who accompanying him for security reasons.

Toure was hit several times by Makalou’s bodyguards and he was forced to drink his own urine. Toure’s cousin was also beaten in a separate room. Makalou also threatened Toure with death if he informed about the incident to anyone. Although the journalist lodged a complaint against the Colonel with the military unit of the Gendarmerie to which Makalou belongs.

APNS terms ad policy draft against freedom of expression

ISLAMABAD: The All Pakistan Newspapers Society (APNS) termed the draft of advertisement policy of the government as against the freedom of expression and tantamount to controlling and limiting the media freedom by killing small news outlets financially. It also said the new draft is aimed at subduing the freedom of expression to the government through centralisation

According to the statement, the APNS meeting on Monday was held to discuss the draft of the government’s advertisements’ policy. The Special Advisor to the PM, Iftikhar Durrani, attended the meeting at the APNS request. The president of the APNS, Hameed Haroon, Secretary General Sarmad Ali, Vice-President Mehtab Khan, Mujeeb ur Rehman Shami, Rameeza Majeed Nazami and others expressed their reservations over the draft. The Adviser to the PM, Iftikhar Durrani, assured the APNS that the government would take all possible steps for the progress of the media and to safeguard the freedom of expression. On this account, he added that all concerns of the newspapers and magazines would be addressed through mutual understanding. He said the draft was only forwarded to the APNS to elicit their opinion which would only be finalised after mutual consultations.

President APNS Hameed Haroon, Vice-President Mehtab Khan, Secretary General Sarmad Ali, Joint-Secretary Bilal Mehmood, Finance Secretary Waseem Ahmed, Mumtaz A Tahir (Daily Aftab), Rehmat Ali Raazi (Weekly Azm/Daily Taqat), Humayun Tariq (Daily Business Report, Faisal), Naveed Chaudhry (Daily City 42), Syed Akbar Tahir ( Daily Jasarat), Javed Mehr Shamsi (Daily Kaleem), Abdul Jabbar (Daily Kawish), Syed Ayaz Badshah (Daily Mashriq Peshawar), Syed Mumtaz Ahmed Shah (Daily Mashriq Quetta), Sardar Khan Niazi (Monthly Nea Rukh), Rukhsana Saulat Saleemi (Weekly Nikhar), Syed Muhammad Munir Jillani (Daily Paigham), and Gohar Zahid Malik (Daily Pakistan Observer) attended the meeting.

The News 

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Journalist shot dead, another injured in Peshawar

PESHAWARA journalist was gunned down with his colleague sustaining serious injuries after being targeted by unidentified assailants in Peshawar on Monday.

The victims, identified as Noorul Hasan and Sabir, worked for a private television channel in Nowshera. The duo was travelling on the busy Ring Road when they were intercepted by armed men and fired upon.

Hasan was shifted to a local hospital where he succumbed to his injuries, with Sabir’s condition said to be critical. The body of the deceased has been handing over to his family.

The Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P) Inspector General Police Salahuddin Khan Mehsud took notice of the incident, and ordered a detailed report into the matter.

Further, Capital City Police Officer Peshawar has been ordered to personally oversee the investigation.

Meanwhile, the K-P Union of Journalists has condemned the murder and demanded to take to task those responsible for the murders.

“The K-P government and security forces have failed in ensuring the protection of the journalists,” read a statement by the journalists’ organisation.

The Express Tribune

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