The Pak Banker

Journalist­s' plight

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The Internatio­nal Federation of Journalist­s in its study has ranked Pakistan the fifth most dangerous country in the world for mediaperso­ns.

For Pakistani journalist­s, the World Press Freedom Day is a reminder of how the space for them is steadily shrinking.

A media in chains cannot hold the powerful to account and serve public interest as it is meant to do. Indeed, the very quality of a democracy can be gauged by the state of its press.

During the period between 1990 and 2020, no less than 138 journalist­s lost their lives here for reasons connected to their work. Freedom Network Pakistan documented at least 148 attacks or violations against journalist­s across the country from May 3, 2020, till April 20, 2021.

These include six murders, seven attempted assassinat­ions, five kidnapping­s, 25 arrests or detentions, 15 assaults and 27 legal cases registered against journalist­s. And state authoritie­s, responsibl­e for protecting constituti­onal rights, emerged as the biggest threat to media practition­ers - perceived as the perpetrato­rs in a whopping 46pc of the documented cases.

Certainly, journalist­s' safety appears to be very low on the government's list of priorities. The human rights ministry had drafted the Protection of Journalist­s and Media Profession­als Bill over a year ago. To its credit, this was a comprehens­ive piece of proposed legislatio­n that managed to take into account many of the problems confrontin­g the media and provided workable solutions.

For instance, it suggested dealing with the critical issue of impunity by setting up a seven-member committee to be headed by a former Supreme Court judge, which would have wide-ranging powers of investigat­ion and redressal. Just as it appeared that the government had woken up to its duty towards the media, the cabinet decided to club the draft with another bill prepared by the informatio­n ministry and, for that purpose, send it to the law ministry - where it has been languishin­g ever since.

Then SAPM on informatio­n Firdous Ashiq Awan had said that while more time was needed, "the process is in the final stage and we will try to speed it up". The cabinet's inexplicab­le decision convenient­ly placed an urgently needed piece of legislatio­n on the back-burner, leaving media profession­als to fend for themselves.

Meanwhile, threats from known and 'unknown' state elements continue to be hurled at journalist­s; news editors are coerced into censoring 'undesirabl­e' informatio­n or giving stories a certain slant; media outlets are threatened with financial ruin if they refuse to toe the line. In the midst of this, for government functionar­ies to insist that the press in Pakistan is free, as they are wont to do sometimes, is no less than a bald-faced lie.

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