Khaleej Times

Number of Twitter followers blogger Ahmad Waqass has

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rawalpindi — When Pakistan’s military spokesman held a press conference earlier this month on emerging threats, Matiullah Jan, a journalist who has written critically of the judiciary and the military, was surprised to see his own picture flash on the screen.

The spokesman, Gen. Asif Ghafoor, said Jan and a handful of other journalist­s and bloggers were anti-state and anti-military. Those are serious allegation­s in Pakistan, where the military has ruled, directly or indirectly, for most of the country’s history, and where rights groups say it is waging an unpreceden­ted campaign of intimidati­on ahead of next month’s elections.

“He wasn’t specific,” Jan said of the press conference. “But he tried to paint everyone on the so-called slide prepared by intelligen­ce reports with a broad brush as being anti-state and anti-army.”

Analysts say the military and a powerful spy agency are trying to maintain their power amid an unusually long period of civilian rule. The July 25 vote will mark the first time the country has held three consecutiv­e elections without a coup, but the armed forces are still believed to wield considerab­le power behind the scenes.

The security apparatus has zeroed in on the ruling Pakistan Muslim League, the party of former prime minister Nawaz Sharif, who was forced to step down last year after leaked documents from a Panama law firm revealed he and his family had undisclose­d assets abroad. Sharif was banned from politics for life and was also ordered to step down as the leader of his party.

Sharif has denied any wrongdoing, and supporters say he was punished far more harshly than other politician­s found guilty of corruption. They have suggested the military is going after Sharif because he had criticised its efforts to combat extremist groups.

“The heavy handedness is to achieve a certain result . . . they don’t want a strong government and parliament that can legislate the judiciary and military,” said Gul Bukhari, a social media activist who was kidnapped earlier this month and held briefly before being returned to her home blindfolde­d. Bukhari refused to identify the culprits but said the experience was terrifying.

Other journalist­s and bloggers say they have been similarly targeted after speaking out.

Ahmad Waqass Goraya said his parents were “terrified” after agents with the powerful InterServi­ces Intelligen­ce twice came to their home and threatened to arrest them if he continued to criticise the military.

“Straightaw­ay they said they were from the ISI,” said Goraya, who fled to the Netherland­s after he and four other bloggers were picked up earlier this year. They said they were held by the ISI, tortured and threatened with blasphemy charges, which are punish-

Pakistani human right activists rally against missing bloggers in Islamabad. —

The current attempt to stifle the media is much more elaborate than the attempts made in the past

Scott Griffin,

able by death and can incite mob violence. Goraya, who has more than 19,000 Twitter followers, said his parents were told to keep him quiet “at least until the elections.”

Marvi Sirmed, a journalist and rights activist, returned from a holiday earlier this month to find her home ransacked.

She said the culprits made off with two laptops and travel documents but left behind expensive jewelry, indicating the break-in was politicall­y motivated. She had attracted the attention of the ISI by promoting friendlier ties with India and by criticisin­g militant groups with links to the security forces. “The intention (of the break-in) was not material,” Sirmed said. “The intention was to see what was on our laptops.”

The Dawn, a respected Englishlan­guage daily, had its distributi­on restricted after publishing an interview with Sharif in which he criticised the military. Hameed Haroon, the chief executive of the media group that owns the paper, said it was singled out by authoritie­s

Number of personnel army to deploy on the polling day

of Internatio­nal Press Institute, Vienna

“because it has taken a posture that is pro-democracy.”

The Internatio­nal Press Institute, a Vienna-based advocacy group, has described an “unpreceden­ted” campaign against critical media, including intimidati­on, kidnapping­s and threatenin­g phone calls. It says many outlets have been pressured into self-censorship.

“The current attempt to stifle the media is much more elaborate than the attempts made in the past,” said Scott Griffin, a spokesman for the group. He said the attacks and intimidati­on “are not random incidents but appear as part of a larger plan to muzzle independen­t journalist­s.”

Steven Butler, the Asia Programme Coordinato­r for the Committee to Protect Journalist­s, said there has been a “stepped up and multi-pronged attack on the media aimed at shaping coverage.”

“One of the goals seems too be to undermine the electoral prospects of the current ruling party,” he said. “The links to the military seem more obvious or transparen­t

The heavy handedness is to achieve a certain result . . . they don’t want a strong government and parliament that can legislate the judiciary and military.

Gul Bukhari, A journalist

than in the past.” Ghafoor, the military spokesman, denied the allegation­s of intimidati­on and said the military is committed to democratic civilian rule. He also denied he was targeting journalist­s at his June 4 press conference.

“We are the strong supporters of democracy,” Ghafoor said. “But the army is the most organised and capable institutio­n with the ability to assist.” The Election Commission of Pakistan, a civilian body, has asked the military to deploy 350,000 serving and retired personnel to secure the July 25 elections for the National Assembly

But he (the military spokesman) tried to paint everyone on the so-called slide prepared by intelligen­ce reports with a broad brush as being anti-state and antiarmy.

Matiullah Jan, A journalist

and four provincial legislatur­es. That’s nearly five times the number deployed in the 2013 elections, when attacks by extremist groups were far more common.

The troops will be stationed inside and outside polling stations, according to two election workers who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

S. Akbar Zaidi, a professor at Columbia University, says civilian government­s have grown more assertive with each successive election, a “slight and often subtle” change. —

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