Journalists freed

Published October 18, 2017

IF Pakistan is a dangerous country for journalists, then those who report from Fata are among the most at risk due to militancy and security-related sensitivities in the area. This was yet again demonstrated by recent events in KP. On Sunday, Shahnawaz Tarkzai, a senior correspondent working in the tribal areas for Mashaal Radio, was abducted by unidentified armed men from a press club in Charsadda district. In a similar incident, Islam Gul Afridi who is based in Khyber and writes for Akhbar-i-Khyber’s weekly magazine, was picked up while en route to Peshawar from Islamabad. Both were later set free unharmed, if shaken by the experience, and have yet to disclose anything about their ordeal. Besides these two, a freelancer and journalism student, Junaid Ibrahim, was taken away from his house in Swat. He has yet to be recovered.

In a security state with little accountability and a militancy problem, providing information to the public is in itself deemed a suspicious activity that must be controlled and manipulated. Journalists are thus routinely intimidated by various quarters: some, for the sake of self-preservation, either sanitise their stories, restrict themselves to ‘non-controversial’ subjects or even leave the profession. In the absence of any definitive evidence — which most likely will never surface — it is perhaps premature to point fingers, but the modus operandi in the recent incidents is not unfamiliar. At least both journalists have been freed; many others have not been so lucky. After Hayatullah Khan was abducted in Fata in late 2005 — following his report about a drone strike that killed a militant leader in North Waziristan — and found dead six months later, a judicial inquiry was ordered. The report, however, was never made public, although he was the fifth journalist to be killed in Waziristan within a span of two years. It is this impunity and the government’s utter lack of interest in bringing journalists’ murderers to book that keeps alive the threat to the critical agents of public information in Pakistan.

Published in Dawn, October 18th, 2017

Opinion

Editorial

IMF’s unease
Updated 24 May, 2024

IMF’s unease

It is clear that the next phase of economic stabilisation will be very tough for most of the population.
Belated recognition
24 May, 2024

Belated recognition

WITH Wednesday’s announcement by three European states that they intend to recognise Palestine as a state later...
App for GBV survivors
24 May, 2024

App for GBV survivors

GENDER-based violence is caught between two worlds: one sees it as a crime, the other as ‘convention’. The ...
Energy inflation
Updated 23 May, 2024

Energy inflation

The widening gap between the haves and have-nots is already tearing apart Pakistan’s social fabric.
Culture of violence
23 May, 2024

Culture of violence

WHILE political differences are part of the democratic process, there can be no justification for such disagreements...
Flooding threats
23 May, 2024

Flooding threats

WITH temperatures in GB and KP forecasted to be four to six degrees higher than normal this week, the threat of...