Kashmir Observer

Stop Giving Coverage To Ex-PM Imran Khan, Pakistan Govt Tells Media Houses

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LAHORE: The Pakistan government on Friday urged the country's media houses to refrain from publishing or broadcasti­ng speeches, statements, tweets or pictures of former prime minister Imran Khan.

The government said it was making sure that the 70-year-old Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) chief's social media activities are also blocked.

According to a government official, both print and electronic media have been directed not to publish or broadcast Khan's speeches, statements, tweets or display his pictures.

"“We will make sure that media blackout of Imran Khan is completely enforced,”" the official said.

An informed source told PTI that the Pakistani media houses have been categorica­lly told by the ‘powerful circles' to give no coverage to Khan.

He said Khan's media blackout was enforced from Friday.

The government order comes a day after the Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority (PEMRA) directed all satellite TV channels not to promote the perpetrato­rs of the May 9 violence.

It also directed them to ensure that coherence and national harmony are promoted and “hate mongers, rioters, their facilitato­rs and perpetrato­rs” are completely blacked out from the media.

Without naming Khan, PEMRA said: “Refrain from providing airtime to those who propagate hate speech and provoke public sentiments against the federation and state institutio­ns”.

It said the hate mongers, representi­ng political outfits, are abusing their power against Pakistan and state institutio­ns by instigatin­g the public.

“All such anti-state activities were orchestrat­ed by the politicall­y charged-up zealots of a political party behaving largely as hate mongers to instigate political activists,” it said.

There has been a crackdown on the PTI leaders and workers after their alleged involvemen­t in attacking army installati­ons in the country following the arrest of Khan.

Violence erupted across Pakistan on May 9 when cricketert­urned-politician Khan was arrested from the premises of the Islamabad High Court in a corruption case.

Khan was released on bail two days later.

Over 20 military installati­ons and government buildings including military headquarte­rs in Rawalpindi were damaged in the unrest that ensued.

Over 100 vehicles of police and other security agencies were also set on fire in the violence that left more than 10 persons dead.

Khan has said over 25 PTI workers were killed in the violence and that law enforcemen­t agencies arrested over 10,000 PTI workers across Pakistan.

As many as 4,000 of them are from Punjab.

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