An Insider Account of Pakistani Censorship

An Insider Account of Pakistani Censorship

Imran Khan, Tahir ul Qadri, and the ISI [Inter-Services Intelligence] are our best friends,” our weekly editorial meeting at Pakistan’s Express Tribune was (jokingly) told on Aug. 13, 2014, a day before the two political leaders began their separate long marches from Lahore to Islamabad, and plunged the country into crisis. “We know it’s not easy, but that’s the way it is — at least for now. I promise to make things better soon,” said the editor, who had called the meeting to inform us about the media group’s editorial policy during the sit-ins and protests that would eventually, momentarily paralyze the Pakistani government.

The senior editorial staff, myself included, reluctantly agreed to the orders, which came from the CEO, because our jobs were on the line. Media groups in Pakistan are family-owned and make all decisions unilaterally — regardless of whether they concern marketing and finance or editorial content and policy — advancing their personal agendas through the influential mainstream outlets at their disposal. A majority of the CEOs and media house owners are businessmen, with no background (or interest) in the ethics of journalism. The owners and publishers make it very clear to their newsrooms and staff — including the editor — that any tilt or gloss they proscribe is non-negotiable. As a result, serious concerns persist about violence against and the intimidation of members of the media. In fact, Pakistan ranks 158 out of 180 countries in the 2014 World Press Freedom Index.

Yet there is also a more elusive problem within the country’s press landscape: the collusion of Pakistan’s powerful military and the nation’s media outlets. I experienced this first-hand while I worked as a journalist at the Express Tribune during the recent protests led by Khan, the populist cricketer-turned-politician, and Qadri, a Pakistani-Canadian cleric and soapbox orator.

During this time, the owners of Pakistani media powerhouses — namely ARY News, the Express Media Group, and Dunya News — received instructions from the military establishment to support the “dissenting” leaders and their sit-ins. The military was using the media to add muscle and might to the anti-government movement in an attempt to cut Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif down to size.

The media obliged.

At the Express Media Group, anything related to Khan and Qadri were inexorably the lead stories on the front page or the hourly news bulletin. I witnessed polls showing support for Sharif being censored, while news stories on the misconduct of the protesters, along with any evidence that support among the protestors for Khan and Qadri was dwindling, were axed. While the BBC was publishing stories about how Qadri’s protesters were allegedly being paid and Dawn, the leading English-language Pakistani newspaper — and the Express Tribune’s main competitor — was writing powerful editorials about the military’s role in the political crisis, we were making sure nothing negative about them went to print.

Day after day, my national editor told me about how he received frantic telephone calls late in the evening about what the lead story should be for the next day and what angle the article should take. First, we were told to focus on Khan. “Take this as Imran’s top quote,” “This should be in the headline,” “Take a bigger picture of him” were the specific directives given by the CEO. Shortly after, the news group’s owner was agitated that the newspaper had not been focusing enough on Qadri. We later found out that the military establishment was supporting the two leaders equally and the media was expected to do the same.

In their professional capacities, the editor and desk editors tried to put up a fight: they allowed some columns against the protests slip through; they did not extend the restrictions to publish against Khan and Qadri to the Web version of the newspaper; and they encouraged reporters to focus on the paper’s strengths, such as investigative and research-based reports. However, it was difficult for the staff to keep its spirits high with the CEO’s interference and his readiness to abide by the establishment’s instructions. To be sure, the dictates were never given to the senior editorial staff, of which I was a part, directly. They were instead relayed to the editor or the national editor (who heads the main National Desk) via the CEO and then forwarded to us.

People often speculate about the media-military collusion in Pakistan, but in the instance of the current political standoff in the federal capital, as well as the Geo News controversy — where the establishment was seen resorting to extreme methods, such as forcing cable operators to suspend Geo’s transmission and impelling competing media houses to publish news stories against Geo, to curtail the broadcast of the largest and most-watched television channel for accusing then-ISI chief Zaheer-ul-Islam of being behind the gun attack on Hamid Mir, its most-popular anchor — the media and the military worked hand-in-hand.

In most cases, it is common knowledge that the heavyweight broadcast anchors have strong ties to members of the military establishment, and they personally take direct instructions that are then conveyed to the owners of their respective media groups. This bias is often reflected in their coverage.

The anchors not only indulge in inaccurate reporting, but also shape political discourse against the democratically elected government and even the efficacy of democracy itself. Former Pakistani government officials have corroborated this by narrating their experience. One senior official told me: “Television anchors receive funds from the military establishment, if not the civilian Ministry of Information and Broadcasting. Today, all the Pakistani intelligence agencies and the military have media departments that ostensibly only disseminate background information and press briefings, but are actually guiding and managing discourses and the national narrative.”

And this narrative is pro-army. Consider one example in particular.

On Aug. 31, when Khan’s and Qadri’s protesters had stormed the Parliament’s gates, Mubasher Lucman, a television anchor for ARY News — now the most-watched TV channel in Pakistan after Geo’s transmission was illegally suspended — saluted the army during a live broadcast and invited the military to take over “and save the protesters and the country.” Earlier on Aug. 25, he welcomed the “sound of boots” (a reference to the military), as he had no sympathy for corrupt politicians who looted the country.

As if this was not enough, Lucman and his fellow anchors at ARY, some of whom are known to have strong ties to the army and the ISI, also made unverified claims on live television that seven protesters had been killed by riot police in the ensuing clash. (It was reported by other news outlets that three people had died, one by accident.) Moreover, when Javed Hashmi, the estranged president of Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf (PTI) party, came out in public on Sep. 1 to reveal how Khan was banking on the military and the judiciary to end Sharif’s government, Lucman slammed Hashmi, while his fellow anchor, Fawad Chaudhry, insisted that Hashmi had been “planted in [the] PTI” by the prime minister’s closest aides.

Hashmi, who is known for his principled politics and who has been tortured and imprisoned by the military over the years, made the claims about Khan in a press conference where he revealed that: “Imran Khan said we cannot move forward without the army…He told us that he has settled all the matters; there will be elections in September.”

Soon after this, we at the Express Tribune were instructed by the military to highlight statements released by the army’s Inter-Services Public Relations office about how it was not a party to the crisis. When the military was on the defensive, issuing rebuttals to Hashmi’s “revelations,” we saw the instructions lessen and the powerful institution backing off. Yet media discourse throughout Pakistan’s history has been influenced by the military, the most powerful institution in the country, or, in a few cases, has been strong-armed and intimidated by civilian heads of state until they were ousted by the military. There is a structural bias against democratic institutions and elected officials in Pakistan, and such a discourse has the not-unintentional effect of making the military seem like a better alternative, thereby reinforcing the notion that democracy does not work.

Media owners seem to “choose” the military establishment as it has been the most potent force and the only constant in Pakistan’s polity. The institutional context of the country’s power structure and patronage politics compels organizations and individuals to be a part of the system, which begins and ends with the military and its premier intelligence agency, the ISI. Abiding by the system without asking questions is rewarded. But even in a country with a deeply problematic history, the intensity of the recent interference is shocking.

Before the current political standoff, the establishment was dictating headlines and editorial policies during Sharif’s trip to India for the inauguration of his counterpart, Narendra Modi, on May 26. While working at the Express Tribune, I was instructed to change the lead story on the Sharif-Modi meeting to give it a negative tint, concentrating on how the Indian prime minister was not welcoming as he focused on security issues. The phrase “show-cause” had to be inserted in the headline, which was a direct order from the CEO, who was getting instructions from the military.

To be sure, the Express Media Group and its staff have been attacked several times during the past year for raising sensitive issues. And here too it tried to balance the military-sponsored anti-government slant by giving room to other opinions in the form of editorials and separate stories. But it also had to survive in a system where the military dominates every aspect of public life. It is a tough choice as the military refuses to protect the country’s journalists, even as the media continues to safeguard the military’s image and ostensible apolitical status.

Neha Ansari worked as a senior sub-editor and shift-in-charge at the Express Tribune’s national desk in Karachi, Pakistan from 2013 to 2014. She is now a visiting researcher at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington, D.C.

Foreign Policy

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Published Photographs Lead to Death Threats in Pakistan

Published Photographs Lead to Death Threats in Pakistan

With the rise of extremist movements around the world, journalists have become prime targets in a war of communication both in the field and back at home, once their images have been published, as photographer Alixandra Fazzina learned this week.

After five years of working in Pakistan documenting the intimate daily lives of women and children, the London-based NOOR photographer has now become the target of death threats after her work was published in a national British newspaper. “This weekend, some of these stories were published for the first time in The Guardian magazine and online. I received a lot of hate mail and I’ve seen a lot of people erode my credibility on social media. They were intent on trying to destroy me.”

Fazzina was due to travel to Pakistan on Nov. 20, but she has since received warnings from diplomatic sources about “a credible and direct threat against my life,” she says. “I’ve taken risks in Pakistan, but they were very weighted up risks,” she says. “I don’t want to kill myself for a story.” Now, she feels, fear has caught up to her in London.

Fazzina started her career as a frontline photographer covering under reported conflicts in Angola, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Northern Uganda. “Over the years, my work has changed” she says, “It’s gone on instead to look at the consequences and fallout of wars.”

In 2008, after working on a long-term project in Somalia, she moved to Pakistan. “When I arrived, the effects of extremism were really starting to hit home,” she says. “One of the first things I did was to cover what was essentially Pakistan’s first frontline in the tribal areas. It was the first time that Pakistan’s military had engaged and began an operation against the Taliban there.”

Pakistan has been facing conflicts on multiple fronts – from separatist movements in Balochistan to homegrown Pakistani Taliban factions spreading violence across the country and all the way to Karachi – in June, 28 people were killed in a coordinated attack at Jinnah International Airport in the country’s economic capital.

Fazzina’s ambition was to document the consequences of these conflicts. “What I want to get across is how much civilians suffer and to try and tell their stories, to show what the real effects of war are away from the frontlines,” she says. “Millions of people in Pakistan are still suffering now, and they’re not getting any assistance.”

In her photographs, Fazzina has tried to avoid pointing the finger at one particular culprit, instead putting the blame on all participants. “I’ve covered victims of collateral damage, victims of airstrikes, victims of drone strikes. I covered people suffering from the military, from foreign intervention in region and also from the Taliban. I’ve tried to cover victims of war from all sides because I believe that in any theater of war, all players are responsible.”

After diplomatic sources in Islamabad warned her of the threat on her life from local extremist groups, Fazzina has been forced to cancel a planned trip to Pakistan where she was to report on maternal health. “I take this threat very seriously. There is a strong possibility if I return I will be killed simply for having documented what are realities on the ground” she says. “But, I won’t be silenced by this threat.”

Fazzina’s situation isn’t unique, she explains, as Pakistani journalists and photographers constantly risk their lives to document their country. “It’s extremely difficult for journalists to report without facing some kind of a risk – be it threats, harassment, or even expulsion from the country by the state,” says Mustafa Qadri, a researcher at Amnesty International. “We’ve certainly seen this year a number of high-profile attacks on journalists, which seems to be in response to their work being critical of the government, Taliban, or political parties. What brings all of these cases together is the fact that there’s no justice, there’s no accountability. That basically sends a signal that if you’re not happy with what journalists are reporting, you can literally get away with murder.”

Since 2008, Amnesty International has documented 36 cases of journalists who were killed in response to their work, with many more cases of harassment remaining undocumented. The Committee to Protect Journalists has been trying to fight this problem, says Bob Dietz, the Asian program coordinator at the Committee to Protect Journalists. “Everyone feels that they have total impunity to direct a threat towards a journalist. Foreign journalists aren’t the largest targets for these things; it’s really the local Pakistani journalists who bear the brunt of it. A Pakistani journalist awakes in the morning, opens his phone and check for messages and there might well be a string of threats in there. It’s a way of life. It’s a reality that people are dealing with.”

“We’ve tried to combat it,” Dietz adds. “[We’ve asked] journalists not to hide these threats, and instead to bring them out in public as a way to disarm them.” Yet, the CPJ and Amnesty International don’t expect such menaces to subside, including those against Fazzina. “We really welcome the work that she did,” says Qadri. “We feel that not enough is done to expose the condition of women and girls in Pakistan; what ordinary life is for them. It’s really sad that in trying to do that, she’s now facing these kinds of threats.”

For the 40-year-old photographer, these threats are indicative of a massive shift in war reporting. “The landscape has really changed from fundamentalist groups wanting to tell their stories to journalists becoming actual targets of these groups,” says Fazzina. “In some way, the voices that can speak out against human rights abuses are slowly being silenced. And people would rather shoot the messenger than acknowledged the actual state of [affairs].”

Alixandra Fazzina is a London-based photographer represented by NOOR.

Olivier Laurent is the editor of TIME LightBox. Follow him on Twitter and Instagram @olivierclaurent

Source: TIME

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Govt tried to buy journalists but they refused: Imran

Govt tried to buy journalists but they refused: Imran

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Tahreek-e-Insaf (PTI) Chairman Imran Khan has said journalists are not for sale and media workers have played an important role in restoration of democracy and sustainability in the country.

Talking to a delegation of Pakistan Federation of Union of Journalists (PFUJ) at his residence in Bani Gala, he said the government tried to offer hefty amounts to journalists but the journalists turned down the offer and expressed impartiality.

He said that media is the fourth pillar of the state. He appreciated role of PFUJ in the struggle for sustainability of democracy in the country. PFUJ President Afzal Butt led the delegation comprising Syed Bukhar Shah, National Press Club Secretary Tariq Chaudhry, PFUJ members Ryaz Khan, Qurban Satti, RIUJ General Secreatry Bilal Dar and others.

Shah Mehmood Qureshi, Shafqat Mehmood, Dr Sheeren Mazari and others accompanied Imran during the talks. Afzal Butt made it clear to PTI central leadership that allegations like journalists are salable commodity in public gatherings hurt journalists and are baseless. He said if the PTI has proof, it should come up in public and names of salable journalists should be exposed.

The News

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Journalists boycott Qureshi’s talks over Imran’s charges

Journalists boycott Qureshi’s talks over Imran’s charges

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) Vice Chairman and ex-foreign minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi on Wednesday had to face an awkward situation, when the media persons resorted to a token boycott of his news briefing over party Chairman Imran Khan’s allegations that the government had paid billions to buy journalists, anchorpersons and media houses.

In a bid to pacify the journalists, the PTI vice-chairman promised to talk to his party chairman within 24 hours.PFUJ President Afzal Butt on Tuesday called on Imran to either reveal the names of the beneficiaries (journalists) or protest camps would be set up at press clubs across Pakistan and in front of the container of Imran Khan at the Parade Ground.The journalist fraternity demanded of the PTI chairman to name those journalists who had received funds from the government.

The News

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Special fund for families of martyred journalists sought

Special fund for families of martyred journalists sought

ISLAMABAD: Participants of a seminar on Wednesday demanded of the federal and provincial governments to arrest culprits involved in killing of 112 journalists across the country and establish special fund to provide financial assistance to the families of all of them who sacrificed their lives in pursuance of their professional duties.

The seminar was held by Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists (PFUJ) in coordination with Rawalpindi Islamabad Union of Journalists (RIUJ) and National Press Club (NPC) to mark International Journalists Martyrs Day.

In all, 112 journalists have so far been killed in Pakistan out of which 72 lost lives in targeted killings, 22 were killed in suicide attacks, 14 got killed after their kidnapping, bodies of two journalists were found in the open and throats of two journalists were slit by murderers.

Speaking on the occasion, Minister for Religious Affairs Sardar Muhammad Yousaf said he would raise the issue of security of the journalists in the cabinet meeting because it is responsibility of the government to protect life and property of all the citizens of Pakistan.

“Journalists always rendered sacrifices for the cause of freedom of expression and the government and people of Pakistan acknowledge their role in protecting national interests,” he said.Deputy Speaker National Assembly Murtaza Javed Abbasi said many journalists have so far sacrificed their lives in ongoing war against terrorism and the nation would always remember their role in protecting and promoting national interests.

“Those who are involved in killing of journalists want to push Pakistan into the state of chaos and turmoil and they are enemies of this country. I would raise the issue of killing of journalists in the National Assembly and also approach the government to establish funds for families of the martyred journalists,” he said.

The Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) leader Senator Farhatullah Babar said he would point out the issue of non-issuance of funds announced by former prime minister Syed Yusuf Raza Gilani to disabled journalists in the upcoming meeting of the standing committee.

He said: “A bill would be drafted in coordination with the PFUJ that would be presented in the Parliament to ensure security and protection of the journalists and their families.”

Secretary Information of Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-Fazl (JUI-F) Hafiz Hussain Ahmad said his party would coordinate with other political parties in the Parliament to ensure that the respective governments take serious steps to arrest those involved in killing of the journalists.

The PFUJ president Afzal Butt said it is really unfortunate that the federal and provincial governments have so far done nothing to arrest people involved in killing of the journalists that would ultimately encourage other segments who want to mute the voice of media.

The NPC president Shaharyar Khan said the families of martyred journalists are facing financial constraints but the government is yet to take any step to provide them any kind of relief.

“The government neither arrested killers nor provided relief to the families of the martyred journalists that shows its insensitivity towards the profession that is considered fourth pillar of the state,” he said.

The RIUJ secretary general Bilal Dar said journalists would continue to raise the voice of the people and put in their best efforts to help protect rights of the downtrodden segments of the society.

Social activist Julius Salik said media acts like eyes and ears of the society and if it comes under attack then the society may become blind and deaf so it is necessary to take immediate measures to provide security to the journalists and media houses.

Those who also spoke on the occasion included representative of Freedom Network Adnan Rehmat, senior journalist Iqbal Khattak and family members of the martyred journalists.

The News

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NA body seeks proposals to help families of slain journalists

NA body seeks proposals to help families of slain journalists

ISLAMABAD: The National Assembly standing committee on information and broadcasting on Tuesday directed the ministry to prepare proposals for the allocation of funds to help the families of journalists who lost their lives in the line of duty. The meeting of the committee was presided over by Marvi Memon.

Secretary Information Mohammad Azam informed the meeting that the ministry was planning to work on a proposal to allocate Rs200 million for the families of the journalists who received injuries or were killed in the line of duty.

“The government has not paid a single penny to the families of the journalists who were killed or injured while performing their duties,” the secretary said in reply to a question by Ms Memon. The members expressed concerns over the role of the ministry which they said had failed to compensate the families of the victims.

Mr Azam said the government had already abolished the secret fund which was also used to support the journalists’ community to overcome their health-related issues in the past.

Secretary information says no compensation has been paid so far to families of mediapersons

“We have a proposal for the allocation of funds in this regard and have already discussed it with the government’s financial adviser to process in this regard,” he added.

Ms Memon directed the officials to finalise the proposals as soon as possible, adding the committee would fully support the proposals.

On Monday, the secretary had also informed the Senate standing committee on information and broadcasting that the ministry had already forward a summary to the ministry of finance to allocate Rs200 million for this purpose.

The secretary told the NA committee that the ministry was also planning to arrange workshops for journalists working in conflict zones.

“We have allocated Rs100 million for the training of journalists covering development activities. The mediapersons will be trained on the standards of economic reporting,” he added. Ms Memon later said a separate meeting would be convened to discuss issues related to the rating system of private TV channels.

The committee directed the ministry to improve the quality of press releases being issued by the Press Information Department (PID) and its regional offices.

It also recommended deputing more cameramen/reporters on the foreign visits of the prime minister.

Iqbal Khattak, a Peshawar-based senior journalist and media safety expert, told Dawn that nine mediapersons and four assistants attached with different media organisations lost their lives so far in the current year.

“It is unfortunate that the government has failed to allocate funds at the federal level for the families of the journalists who were killed in the line of duty.”

He said the government provided financial support to the families of the police and military personnel who lost their lives in the line of duty.

“The government is not serious in punishing the killers of the journalists. The culprits target journalists due to the slim chances of being convicted and punished,” he said.

Mr Khattak demanded the government establish a special public prosecutor to investigate and proceed against the attackers on journalists across the country.

DAWN

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How serious are Imran’s allegations against journalists?

How serious are Imran’s allegations against journalists?

KARACHI: The allegations of corruption against journalists are not new in this country. Political parties and successive governments have never been happy with this community. But such accusations, if they come from the national leaders like Imran Khan, they damage their credibility. So the accusations must be probed and Imran should come out with evidence, and it’s better for him not to rely on unreliable people.

Imran Khan is the most prominent opposition leader who not once but repeatedly have branded anchors, columnists, analysts and even media houses as “saleable property”. Therefore, it should not go unnoticed.

In today’s competitive world of media, allegations should not be rejected without a proper probe but the burden of truth always should be on the accuser. Journalists in the past and even today have been accused of taking “bribe and favour”. Accusations are no more confined to the government and agencies but also to other “interested parties”.

Complete polarisation of the media has not only divided the journalist fraternity but they have also been criticised for their “biases”.Late Justice (retd) Dorab Patel once said about the media: “You are under obligation not to distort the truth. But what is the truth? Ask the governor, two thousand years ago, and that question has never been answered, because our conception of truth is affected by our biases. So, the obligation on the journalists is to try to be as objective as possible.”

The Press need freedom not as a right but in discharge of its obligation in a free society to expose possible wrongdoings, particularly of the governments and corruption in other institutions, including within the media.

Justice Patel further said: “I think the power of the Press will increase and it will become stronger to the extent to which you are moderate in your language and to the extent you discharge your duty of verifying to the best of your ability the facts before you publish them.”

The same standard stands for political leaders who are supposed to lead the nation. How can you accuse a community without having any evidence?Imran, who is also the Chairman of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, by attacking the journalists without naming as who has taken the money and from where, has endangered their lives as they can come under attack by his ‘motivated’ workers. In a way, he has presented his ‘concept’ of Press Freedom, which may mean “no dissent is acceptable”.

Both Benazir Bhutto and Mian Nawaz Sharif, when in the opposition, had also accused journalists of taking money from the government of the day. Journalists were also accused of working on the payroll of intelligence agencies. However, when they came to power and were asked to disclose the names of journalists who had been paid from the secret funds or through other means, they just ignored it.

Imran Khan must make a public commitment that when his party comes to power he will order an independent high powered commission to probe his allegations, release the list of all those on payroll or paid from different accounts. The commission should also suggest punishment but, at the same time, if his accusations are found untrue, the same recommendations should also be for the accusers.

He should also make a public commitment that when his party comes to power, he will release the list of journalists on payroll of intelligence agencies. Journalist bodies like the PFUJ have been demanding this for decades. So let the leader of ‘Naya Pakistan’ make a public commitment.

Perhaps, the PTI chairman was not aware of the fact that it was due to the efforts of journalists that the secret fund of the Ministry of Information was abolished. Thanks to the efforts of Mr Hamid Mir and Mr Absar Alam’s petition in which some other journalists and anchors also became a party, the SC took up the matter, which is still pending for the final order.

Imran may also not be aware of our efforts to eradicate corruption from the media, as we take it more seriously than politicians because it’s a question of our credibility. Besides politicians, many untrustworthy people in the media industry also labelled such allegations without any evidence. Thus, it was due to our efforts that the Supreme Court had formed two members Media Commission comprising Justice (retd) Nasir Aslam Zahid and former Information Minister Javed Jabbar.

I advise Imran and PTI leaders to just go through the Media Commission report which is now also available in book form.Imran and his party can go to the SC and become a party in the same petition. If they have evidence against the journalists, anchors, columnists and analysts, they should submit the same before the court.

If nothing else, Imran should ask people like former information minister Sheikh Rashid Ahmad, former intelligence chiefs, some of whom at times were seen on his container, to disclose the names of journalists, anchors, columnists and analysts whom they had ‘paid’ in their tenure and for what purpose. How much money they had spent on journalists from the secret funds?

After all, people like Sheikh Rasheed in the past had remained the spokesman of Mian Nawaz Sharif and General (retd) Pervez Musharraf. Sheikh Saheb must have the knowledge of how the secret funds were used since the days of General Ziaul Haq. Who knows better than him how funds were used to build a leader’s image.

Perhaps, the PTI and Imran Khan want that everyone should praise them, support them and don’t ask critical questions.Imran has the right to praise any anchor or columnist and one must respect his views, but at the same time he should also learn to respect and praise “dissenting voices” in the media. Only a few days back, I got a chance to meet the PTI spokesperson and former editor of an English daily, Ms Shireen Mazari in a media workshop. She was right when she said, “Journalists have every right to form their own opinions and views about us, but our only request would be that they should also take our version as well.” I endorsed her view and said, “You have every right to give your version.”

She also assured complete protection and safety of journalists, particularly those from Geo TV, in PTI rallies and in Dharna. “I will make sure that the media should not have any complaint in future.” But, only hours later, Geo’s DSNG van was attacked and its reporters were harassed.

She had even assured the journalists that she would talk to Imran over his verbal accusations and attack on the media persons from the Dharna container. But after what we have been hearing from the PTI chairman in the last two public meetings against the media, I wonder whether Ms Mazari was able to convince her leader or not.

Actions speak louder than words. One expects from Imran Khan that if he wants to malign the journalists, anchors, columnists, analysts and accuse them as “saleable”, justice demands that he should name them. After all he is leading a “Justice Party”. So let’s wait for Imran’s fresh attack on the media.

The News

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