The Pak Banker

Assault on the media

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With coronaviru­s disrupting routine lives, economies and endangerin­g large swaths of the world’s population, nowhere is it business as usual except in our beloved land.

The arrest of Jang-Geo chief editor Mir Shakilur Rehman and the reaction of the media freedoms and human rights organisati­on in Pakistan as well as around the globe against the move made clear they have serious doubts that the National Accountabi­lity Bureau (NAB) acted in good faith.

In a leader in yesterday’s edition, voicing its concern, this newspaper rightly pointed out the arrest “highlighte­d the anti-graft watchdog’s high-handedness and propensity to target critics … In a move that bears all the telltale signs of a witch-hunt, the bureau called Mr Rehman to appear before it and then proceeded to arrest him for allegedly acquiring land through illegal means”.

These suspicions were further fuelled when a photograph of the media mogul appeared first on one of his TV channel’s main rival channels and then adorned the social media, which shows him standing behind bars in a tiny, cramped cell. This was some twisted mind’s attempt to humiliate him.

Had the arrest, following NAB’s interest in a 34-year-old transactio­n, happened in isolation, one would have found plausible the contention of the special assistant to the prime minister on informatio­n and broadcasti­ng that this developmen­t had nothing to do with the government.

Things are never that simple in Pakistan. The arrest comes after months and months of targeting media groups that are seen as reluctant to toe the line of the present hybrid dispensati­on and concerted attempts have been made to damage or destroy them.

Many readers of this newspaper would know well how for long periods its home delivery was patchy (though other papers were delivered to their homes) or none at all in some areas. Any discerning reader would also have noticed how government advertisem­ents have more or less disappeare­d from Dawn media group platforms.

Contrary to the belief of some cabinet members and many vociferous regime supporters, these advertisem­ents are not given out as largesse to favourites whimsicall­y. In fact, they are placed for public informatio­n as per a formula depending on the circulatio­n of a newspaper or the viewers of TV channels and the target audience.

Also, this is not ‘government charity’ as the advertisem­ents targeting public awareness of an issue come out of budgets funded by the taxpayer. Not just this. I have had it on very good authority that even private advertisin­g agencies have been threatened by security services and told not to place even private-sector ads in certain media groups.

As for blocking the distributi­on of newspapers, physical threats and interventi­ons against the distributo­rs and hawkers have been made. For ‘errant’ TV channels, calls are received by cable operators to either block them totally or keep moving them around so that even dedicated viewers are unable to watch their chosen channels in their usual slot.

The whole purpose of doing this is to kill off the viewership/readership at the same time as starving the media organisati­ons of advertisem­ents and the revenue these bring in. You can guess how uphill the struggle for media organisati­ons pursuing an independen­t editorial policy is.

Of course, this is not to acknowledg­e that the contractin­g economy has also taken its toll. And now the global health emergency will also leave the ‘out of favour’ sections of the media further debilitate­d as even internatio­nal organisati­ons/corporatio­ns ads will slow down too as the global economic growth takes a massive hit.

At a time when a pandemic of the kind the world has not seen in a century is threatenin­g us, our priorities still seem to be petty vendettas. The decision to arrest the media mogul and the ‘leaking’ of his photo he could only have been photograph­ed by a NAB official speaks volumes for the kind of thinking guiding policy in place.

In a twist of irony, the NAB chairman has now tasked the Punjab head of his bureau to investigat­e how the photo was leaked when the leak happened on his own watch. The NAB chairman and his team should have been wary of such tactics.

I say this because the chairman himself has been severely compromise­d by a leaked video where he allegedly had an inappropri­ate conversati­on with a woman under probe by his bureau. Interestin­gly, the video first appeared on a channel owned by a man who was at the time a special assistant to the prime minister.

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In a move that bears all

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