Houston Chronicle

Pakistani reporter says he escaped kidnapping attempt

- By Kathy Gannon

ISLAMABAD — When armed men tried to kidnap and threatened to kill him, Pakistani journalist Taha Siddiqui feared he would become another statistic in a growing list of activists and bloggers who have disappeare­d in Pakistan after criticizin­g the country’s powerful military or advocating peace with hostile neighbor India.

Siddiqui, the Pakistan bureau chief for the World is One News, a New Delhibased 24-hour television news channel, said he suspected the attack Wednesday was payback for his critical reporting on Pakistan’s powerful military and intelligen­ce agencies.

Siddiqui was heading to the airport to catch a flight to London when his taxi was stopped. He was ordered out of the vehicle, beaten and threatened.

He escaped, fleeing into oncoming traffic and flagging down a passing car. Behind him he said he heard the gunmen shout: “Shoot him! Shoot him!”

“They wanted to make me a missing person,” Siddiqui said from a local police station. “This has been coming. It’s all about what I write.”

The gunmen took his computers, several hard drives, his telephone and his passport, said Siddiqui, who is also a reporter for the France 24 television network and has had past run-ins with Pakistani intelligen­ce. In May, he received threatenin­g calls from the counterter­rorism wing of the Federal Investigat­ion Agency, ordering him to come in for questionin­g. Siddiqui, who did not comply, filed a complaint with the courts and said he was told by the FIA that he was being investigat­ed because of his critical stories about the military.

On Wednesday, Siddiqui’s World is One News website, was inaccessib­le in Pakistan. Visitors to the site were told: “The site you are trying to access contains content that is prohibited for viewership from within Pakistan.”

The Committee to Protect Journalist­s Asia program coordinato­r Steven Butler said the attempted abduction on Wednesday “sends a chilling signal to the entire press community.”

The CPJ “is very concerned about the recent pattern of disappeara­nces,” Butler said in an email interview. “While most of the recent disappeara­nces have been mainly social activists, or even students, these abductions amount to severe intimidati­on for anyone who exercises free speech.”

The spokesman for Pakistan’s main intelligen­ce service, the ISI, did not respond to a written request for comment about the attack on Siddiqui. The government says it is investigat­ing the allegation­s and has set up a commission to investigat­e complaints of “enforced disappeara­nce.” In its year-end report, obtained by the Associated Press, the commission said there are 1,532 people who remain missing, suspected of being taken by Pakistani intelligen­ce and law enforcemen­t agencies.

Among them is peace activist Raza Khan, who was taken from his home in the eastern city of Lahore in December by armed men, who also ransacked his apartment, seizing his computer, his files and his telephone. He hasn’t been heard from since.

Early in 2017, six bloggers and social activists, all of whom had criticized the military on social media, disappeare­d. Five were freed and the sixth is still missing. Those who were freed all said they had been held by the country’s powerful intelligen­ce agencies and were tortured. They have all fled the country.

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