The Pak Banker

Press Freedom Day

-

DEMAGOGUER­Y cloaked in the guise of populism is sweeping many parts of the globe, including our region. The media's critical role in holding the powerful to account is being put to the test. On World Press Freedom Day today, it is thus all the more important to recognise the many ways, both old and new, in which journalist­s' voices are being stifled and to remind government­s of their duty to safeguard the universal right to impart and access informatio­n.

The Pakistani state has long had a fraught relationsh­ip with the media, paying lip service to the notion of press freedom even while doing all it can to bend its practition­ers to its will. Decades of overt and covert military interventi­ons and frequently unstable civilian government­s have created a landscape where the media, instead of being a watchdog for the public interest, is expected to serve as a conduit for a heavily securitise­d approach to domestic and regional developmen­ts. Reportage or opinions on 'sensitive' issues invites scrutiny by powerful quarters and entails risks to journalist­s that have varied in intensity and scope at different points in time.

The last few years have been particular­ly challengin­g. Employing its social media outreach to devastatin­g effect, the recently ousted PTI government did more to throttle mainstream media than perhaps any civilian government in the country's history. Even well-regarded senior journalist­s critical of its performanc­e would find themselves at the receiving end of an online mob lynching by troll armies using the canard of 'fake news' to malign and discredit them.

The barrage of online abuse targeting women journalist­s was particular­ly disturbing, aiming as it did to shame them into silence through sexualised tropes and character assassinat­ion. Meanwhile, on the granular level of the newsroom, the government's backers in the establishm­ent micromanag­ed news coverage through coercive tactics not seen since Gen Ziaul Haq's military regime.

The findings in the Freedom Network's latest annual report echo this pattern, with the state and its functionar­ies ranking as the "biggest threat actor" targeting media in Pakistan. It was the suspected perpetrato­r in a whopping 41pc of at least 86 attacks against the media and its practition­ers that the organisati­on recorded between May 2021 and April 2022.

Another significan­t finding was that the nation's capital, home to some of the most secure locations in Pakistan, proved to be "the riskiest and most dangerous place to practise journalism". Sindh was the second worst. Digital media journalist­s paid the highest price for their work, with two of them among four media persons that were killed in the period under review.

The PML-N, which has a major role to play in the ruling coalition, must now demonstrat­e that it will turn the page not only on the marked truncation in media freedom under the PTI government, but also on its own efforts to control the press through controvers­ial legislatio­n.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan