ISLAMABAD: Editor-in-Chief of Jang Publications, Pakistan’s largest media group, Mir Shakil-ur-Rahman was arrested last month on accusations of unlawfully buying a property in the 1980s. The country’s National Accountability Bureau (NAB) alleges that Mir-Shakil-ur-Rahman illegally leased a government land in 1986 and managed to have ownership rights transferred to him in 2016 when ex-PM Nawaz Sharif was at the helm. Sharif was Punjab province’s chief minister in the 1980s, a leading German media house reported on Thursday.
Nawazish Ali, a NAB spokesperson, told DW that Mir Shakil-ur-Rahman was arrested in connection with a shady real estate deal and tax evasion. He refused to talk about the current status of the investigation.
Pakistani journalists and international media organisations have dubbed Mir Shakil-ur-Rahman’s arrest as “politically motivated” and an attack on press freedom.
“The NAB had already decided to arrest Mir Shakil-ur-Rahman. They didn’t find anything against him so they opened a 34-year-old land purchase case,” Umar Cheema, an investigative journalist associated with Jang Media Group, told DW.
Rights activists say that Mir Shakil-ur-Rahman’s arrest has vindicated their claim that Prime Minister Imran Khan’s government is trying to muzzle the freedom of speech and silence critical voices in the country.
“Mir Shakil-ur-Rahman’s arrest is clearly aimed at hurting the largest media group in Pakistan. The government is cracking down on media to prevent it from giving space to the opposition. It has even imposed restrictions on social media,” Adnan Rehmat, an Islamabad-based rights activist and columnist, told DW.
International condemnation
On Monday, EU spokesperson for foreign affairs and security policy, Virginie Battu-Henriksson, urged Pakistani authorities to ensure a fair trial for Mir Shakil-ur-Rahman.
Battu-Henriksson said the EU was firmly committed to supporting progress on human rights, democracy and the implementation of international conventions in Pakistan. “These commitments also form a fundamental condition of the EU’s GSP Plus trade preferences granted unilaterally to Pakistan,” she said, highlighting media freedom in Pakistan as an area of particular concern.
The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) and the Paris-based Reporters Without Borders (RSF) also slammed Mir Shakil-ur-Rahman’s arrest.
“It is six weeks now since Mir Shakil-ur-Rahman was arrested on totally absurd and spurious grounds. Let’s not be fooled. His arrest and detention have absolutely no legal basis,” Daniel Bastard, RSF’s Asia-Pacific director, said in a statement.
RSF’s recently released World Press Freedom Index for 2020 ranked Pakistan 145 out of 180 countries, three places lower than from last year. Opposition groups and civil society activists say the space for dissent and independent journalism has considerably reduced in Pakistan since PM Khan came to power in 2018.
“Mir Shakil-ur-Rahman’s arrest is an attack on press freedom and NAB has been used as a hitman to harass him,” said journalist Cheema. But the government denies these allegations. “It is unjustified to link the arrest [made] on financial wrongdoing to freedom of expression,” said PM’s Special Assistant for Information and Broadcasting Firdous Ashiq Awan.
Micheal Kugelman, a South Asia expert at the Washington-based Woodrow Wilson Center for Scholars, believes that Mir Shakil-ur-Rahman’s case has all the makings of a politicised arrest. “This is a senior figure with a media outlet that hasn’t gotten along well with the state, and who was arrested on questionable charges tied to circumstances that go back more than three decades. While one wouldn’t want to pass definitive judgment and speculate, one can say that the optics of it all are quite dreadful,” Kugelman told DW.
Khan’s personal vendetta?
Imran Khan’s relations with Mir Shakil-ur-Rahman and his media group have been strained since he became prime minister in 2018, defeating ex-PM Sharif in general elections. Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party accuses the Jang Group – and its popular Geo TV channel – of backing Sharif.
“Mir Shakil-ur-Rahman’s arrest is part of Khan’s tough stance against media that dares to criticise his government or give coverage to the opposition, especially leaders of the Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz) party,” according to analyst Rehmat.
Mir Shakil-ur-Rahman’s Geo TV channel has been taken off air several times in past few years.
“The arrest is because of his media group supporting Sharif or due to not accepting to censor. It could be one or the other, or a combination of the two. But the bottom line is that a senior figure with one of the country’s top media outlets finds himself in jail on questionable charges, at a moment when Pakistan is confronting the COVID-19 pandemic that could well hit prisons hard. It is a very troubling state of affairs, to say the least,” Kugelman said.
Newspaper: The News