Gulf News

As army tightens grip Sharif heads to London

MEDIA FACES INCREASED CENSORSHIP OVER COVERAGE OF FORMER PM

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Nawaz Sharif, Pakistan’s former prime minister, left for London yesterday ahead of a looming verdict on corruption charges he and his daughter Maryam face amid mounting signs of a military-led clamp down on the media.

Maryam said they will visit her mother who is undergoing cancer treatment in the UK capital, posting pictures on Twitter of her father sitting in a plane’s business class section. “If exemption not granted, will return before next hearing Insha’Allah,” she said, referring to the criminal case they face.

She added in a separate post that “as the storm abates, those who stood firm, shall emerge victorious & shine through.”

Sharif leaves Pakistan as the media faces increased censorship over coverage of the former premier, who was disqualifi­ed from office last year on graft charges.

He continues to control the ruling party and has held rallies ahead of elections due in July.

Pakistan’s military has strained ties with the civilian government and is widely speculated to have brought about Sharif’s downfall.

Since March, Geo — a popular television channel — has been forced off air in parts of the country and newspaper columnists have complained of censorship. The judiciary, which many see as being supported by the military, has ordered a media regulator to take action against television programs critical of the Supreme Court — which last week issued a lifetime ban against Sharif ever holding public office.

Quiet ban

“The media is under pressure from various institutio­ns,” said Arif Nizami, the editor of the Pakistan Today newspaper. “The bigger danger isn’t these bans, but quiet bans that we don’t see and aren’t talked about.”

Television channels on Tuesday muted or stopped coverage of a speech made by Sharif critical of the courts.

Pakistan’s media has also shied away from covering protests by ethnic Pashtun groups who have accused the military of repression and disappeara­nces. A spokesman for the armed forces wasn’t immediatel­y available for comment.

Journalist­s have also fled the country.

Taha Siddiqui, a prominent Pakistani reporter who has been critical of the military, wrote in the UK Guardian newspaper this month that he relocated to Paris after escaping kidnap on a busy highway in Islamabad in January.

In the open letter to Pakistan’s army chief, General Qamar Bajwa, he accused the military of the attempted abduction and an atmosphere that was muzzling the media and forcing journalist­s into exile.

 ?? AFP ?? Nawaz Sharif (left) attends a seminar along side Pashtunkhw­a Milli Awami chairman Achakzai in Islamabad on Tuesday.
AFP Nawaz Sharif (left) attends a seminar along side Pashtunkhw­a Milli Awami chairman Achakzai in Islamabad on Tuesday.

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