Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Opinion: Pakistan is pursuing an unrelentin­g assault on journalism

In Pakistan, journalist­s are fired, harassed, and assaulted for their critical reporting. Instead of finding support and empathy, they are mocked and manipulate­d — often by the government, writes Umer Ali.

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Pakistan is a country of euphemisms. You find them everywhere. From male impotence to the country's most feared intelligen­ce agency — there's a euphemism for everything considered too "sensitive."

Quite naturally, the military and its intelligen­ce agencies are among the more "sensitive" entities in Pakistan. They don't like being named. So, when journalist­s and members of the public refer to them, they use a range of phrases. The military is "the establishm­ent." The Inter-Service Intelligen­ce (ISI), the leading spy agency, is the "agricultur­e department," or simply, "the aliens." Enforced disappeara­nces are "trips to the northern areas."

So I was quite surprised when Asad Ali Toor, a Pakistani journalist, quite openly referred to the ISI saying that persons identifyin­g with the intelligen­ce service attacked him at his home last month. He was gagged, tied up, and severely beaten with a pistol butt. He's the second journalist physically assaulted in the previous two months alone. In April, Absar Alam, a prominent journalist and commentato­r, was shot just outside his home. Both had criticized the military, especially the ISI, days before the attacks.

Attacks with impunity

In July 2020, another prominent journalist, Matiullah Jan, was "picked up" from outside his wife's school. Luckily, his abduction was caught on camera, and following a severe backlash, he was released late into the night.

All these attacks occurred in the capital Islamabad, known for its extensive surveillan­ce camera system, and yet no progress has been made to arrest the culprits.

To make matters even worse, journalist­s protesting these attacks also face unpleasant consequenc­es. Hamid Mir, Pakistan's best- known TV news anchor, was taken off air by his channel after he criticized the military at a protest against the attack on Asad Ali Toor. He said his family was also being threatened. Mir later apologized for his speech, saying he didn't intend to "defame" the military. His media group's owner had spent months in jail over what Human Rights Watch said were "politicall­y motivated charges." Mir himself, along with other critical journalist­s, face sedition charges.

Unfortunat­ely, the attacks on journalist­s are part of a broader assault on civil liberties in Pakistan. Several human rights activists and opposition politician­s face arrests and "treason" charges.

Assault on journalism

While journalist­s and rights groups point their fingers towards the military, Imran Khan's government has continued a policy of gaslightin­g them. In a BBC interview, Pakistan's minister for informatio­n bragged about taking notice of the latest attack on Asad Ali Toor. When pressed over the ISI's alleged role, he said it's "fashionabl­e" in the western media to accuse the agency and that individual­s lie about the intelligen­ce agencies to be able to claim asylum — or "to get immigratio­n," as the minister put it. Khan himself has laughably claimed that Pakistan's media were freer than their British counterpar­ts.

In a similar duplicitou­s fashion, Khan's government is pursuing a journalist protection bill as well as an ordinance to establish a "media developmen­t authority," which has been unanimousl­y condemned by journalist and rights bodies as "draconian in scope and devastatin­g in its impact." Dawn, Pakistan's respected English daily, has termed the law "a declaratio­n of war against journalist­s." The proposed authority could exercise almost total control over print, broadcast, and digital media.

Having covered Pakistan's press freedom landscape for several years, the government's ill intentions are strikingly clear to me.I have documented the assault on Dawn newspaper, which included choking its circulatio­n, harassment of journalist­s associated with it, and accusation­s of "anti-state" activities.

With or without euphemisms, it's apparent that Pakistan's military doesn't like independen­t journalism. And by aiding and abetting the assault on journalism and gaslightin­g those who are attacked, Imran Khan's government has also made a choice — for all the world to see.

 ??  ?? The Pakistani government seems to be impervious to the crackdown by the military on journalist­s.
The Pakistani government seems to be impervious to the crackdown by the military on journalist­s.
 ??  ?? DW's Umer Ali
DW's Umer Ali

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