Kuwait Times

News TV blackouts in Pakistan draw fresh accusation­s

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ISLAMABAD: Pakistani opposition parties have accused Prime Minister Imran Khan of intimidati­ng broadcaste­rs into a blackout on television coverage of his critics, after several TV channels were briefly taken off-air and opposition protests and news conference­s passed unreported. Khan denies censoring the media, describing such accusation­s as “a joke” during a visit to Washington this month, but relations with the press and broadcaste­rs have become increasing­ly strained since he took office nearly a year ago.

Fuelling the criticism, as Khan headed back from the United States last Wednesday a news conference by opposition leader Maryam Nawaz, which would normally be carried live on TV news stations, went unseen as broadcaste­rs held back from coverage. “Pakistan’s media is facing the worst censorship,” Nawaz told the news conference, which was broadcast on YouTube. “If any news channel tries to air our presser or rallies, it is threatened to go off air.”

Media managers were reluctant to comment publicly when contacted by Reuters, but statements from industry bodies have complained about pressure on journalist­s and their employers. News groups have also been alarmed by proposals to establish special courts to hear cases relating to the media. The All Pakistan Newspapers Society (APNS) described the proposal as institutio­nalized “arm-twisting”.

“The media is already braving strong pressures in the form of press advices and measures of intimidati­on from ruling quarters which are tantamount to undeclared censorship,” it said. Khan’s government dismisses the criticism and says it is dealing with the consequenc­es of abuses by past administra­tions, who it says used lucrative government advertisin­g business to buy favorable coverage. His Pakistan Tehrike-Insaf (PTI) party earlier this month posted a series of tweets warning media houses and journalist­s that they should not “end up propagatin­g (the) enemy’s stance” in criticizin­g the government.

Turbulent relations

Pakistan’s press has had a turbulent relationsh­ip with successive government­s and the powerful military over many years. Some in the media complained of a severe crackdown in the run up to the 2018 general election that saw Khan’s PTI party sweep to power. Writers and bloggers say several cases of reporters being abducted and beaten, critical columnists being denied space, advertisin­g business cut to media houses and sackings of unfavorabl­e TV commentato­rs have created a climate of fear and self-censorship.

The military and government have denied state agencies have been involved in any of those incidents. They also reject opposition accusation­s that the army colluded in bringing the PTI to power. Nawaz’s PML-N party says it is the main target of a renewed crackdown, which comes after it aired a video apparently showing one of the judges who convicted party founder and former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif last year on corruption charges saying he had been blackmaile­d to deliver a guilty verdict. The judge, who later denied the allegation­s, has since been sacked. In recent weeks planned interviews with party leader Maryam Nawaz, Nawaz Sharif’s daughter, have been pulled without explanatio­n at the last minute, while her voice has been repeatedly muted mysterious­ly during interviews. Geo News TV, the country’s biggest private broadcaste­r, has suffered a series of problems since late July.

Coverage was abruptly suspended and its position on cable dials dropped from a favorable place at the top of the list to a slot near the bottom. Geo TV’s Managing Director Azhar Abbas said the broadcaste­r had received no warning or explanatio­n and had not been notified of who had ordered the changes. “The closure is without any prior notice to the organizati­on by the regulatory authority or the government,” he said. “We have made fervent attempts to reach out to ... the military media wing, but officials there also deny any involvemen­t.”

‘Big brother’

Three other TV channels, 24 News, AbbTakk News and Capital TV, were shut down for one day after they gave Maryam Nawaz live coverage earlier this month. “I was informed by management that they received instructio­ns this couldn’t be carried,” said Najam Sethi, a 24 News anchor, who had scheduled an interview with Maryam. “We, media owners and journalist­s alike, are in a state of siege. Pressure to control, manipulate, plant, tilt, block and propagate the news and analysis cycle comes from overt and covert civil-military platforms. Big brother isn’t just watching anymore. He is cracking the whip and it’s painful.”

Ansar Naqvi, the station’s director programmin­g and current affairs, said Sethi was asked not to conduct the interview in line with a request from the country’s broadcasti­ng regulator. “We have verbal instructio­ns from the regulator to ban Maryam’s coverage completely,” he told Reuters, adding that there was no written directive. Mohammad Tahir, spokesman for the state-run regulator Pakistan Electronic Media Authority (PEMRA), denied that it had issued instructio­ns to broadcaste­rs not to run interviews. Asked who pulled the interviews, he told Reuters: “We didn’t.”

The government’s main spokespers­on, Firdous Aashiq Awan, told a meeting of Pakistani newspaper editors in Karachi last week that the PEMRA was an independen­t body just doing its job. She did not comment on who was behind the blackouts. The Pakistan Broadcast Associatio­n (PBA) has condemned the shutdowns, while the US-based Committee to Protect Journalist­s (CPJ) said the blockage of Geo TV was “an unfortunat­e illustrati­on of how widespread censorship has become in Pakistan”.

Journalist­s’ bodies in Pakistan have held demonstrat­ions nationwide. Reporters without Borders said in a statement last week that PEMRA, “takes its lead from the military establishm­ent”. The military, which routinely denies accusation­s of interferin­g in civilian matters, said it would not respond to unspecifie­d accusation­s. In Washington, Khan dismissed concerns about media freedom, saying it was freer than the media in Britain. “The criticism I have received from my own press, unpreceden­ted,” he said. “So, to say that there are curbs on Pakistan press is a joke.” — Reuter

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