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Malik Mohammad Ismail Khan

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Pakistan
Veteran journalist and Resident Editor/Bureau cheif of an independent national news agency "Pakistan Press International" Islamabad Malik Mohammad Ismail Khan,was brutally murderd by unknown assailants in Islambad,on the night of 31st October, 2006 under mysterious circumistances and up untill now his murderers are still at large. He started his career as a reporter from Attock in 1976,and worked his way up to Peshawar and Islamabad as a Bureau Chief and Resident Editor. He was very wellknown,honest,upright ,fearless and a conscientious journalist who was widely admired and respected in the community of journalists for his professionalism and qualities of character. There are mysterious circumstances surrounding his death.Journalist community of Islamabad offered his Nimaze Janaza on the 1st November at 6:30pm infront of office of the Daily Dawn, and the next day on the 2nd of November he was burried in his native graveyard of Village Daurdad (Attock) where his janaza was offered by thousands of people.His brutal murder is widely condemned through out the country.Even the government claimed that they will find the murderer very soon but this is still a mystery.

Murder of Malik Ismail

Wednesday, 6 June 2007

ATTACKS AGAINST JOURNALISTS AND THE MEDIA

INSI South Asia Alerts
Weekly Overview of press reports on attacks against journalists and general security and health alerts

ATTACKS AGAINST JOURNALISTS AND THE MEDIA

PAKISTAN
14-11-06
Reporters boycott Parliament proceedings
ISLAMABAD: Reporters covering parliament proceedings on Tuesday walked out of the press gallery to protest against "lax" police investigation of journalist Muhammad Ismail Khan's murder and the unexplained ban on the countrywide transmission of a private television channel.
Source:
oline-rmnp.tripod.com
OTHER NEWS RELATED TO SECURITY FOR JOURNALISTS
AFGHANISTAN
18-11-2006
Afghan 'threat to wider region'
Afghan President Hamid Karzai has warned that instability in Afghanistan poses a huge threat to peace and prosperity in the whole region. Mr Karzai's blunt message came at a conference in India where he urged neighbouring nations to continue and boost their help for his country.
Source:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/6160642.stm?ls (BBC News)

16-11-06
UK troops kill Afghan civilians
UK forces in Afghanistan have shot dead two civilians and injured a child. An international military spokesman said a patrol opened fire after a van travelling at high speed failed to stop north of Girish in Helmand province.
Source:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/6155550.stm(BBC News)

INDIA
18-11-2006
Curfew in India town after deaths
An indefinite curfew has been imposed on a town in India's north-eastern Assam state after clashes killed seven.
Source:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/6162706.stm (BBC News)

PAKISTAN
20-11-06
UK and Pakistan forge terror pact
The UK and Pakistan have agreed to strengthen their ties to fight terrorism following talks between the countries' two leaders in Lahore. Prime Minister Tony Blair and President Pervez Musharraf agreed that restoring order in Afghanistan was crucial.
Source:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/6161500.stm?ls(BBC News)

17-11-2006
Suicide bomber attacks policemen
A suspected suicide bomber has wounded two policemen and killed himself in the Peshawar, the capital of Pakistan's North West Frontier Province (NWFP). There have been a number of bomb attacks in Peshawar recently - one left six people dead.
Source:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/6162706.stm (BBC News)

21st Century Threats to Press Freedom

21st Century Threats to Press Freedom


Karen Hughes , Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs
Remarks to Freedom House and Broadcasting Board of Governors
Washington, DC
May 1, 2007

View Video

Thank you, Congresswoman Ros-Lehtinen -- I'm honored to be here today with Freedom House and the Broadcasting Board of Governors to speak on the important issue of press freedom. Some of you may know I started my career as a journalist. I worked for seven years as a reporter for a television station in Dallas-Fort Worth.

As a reporter, I covered everything from tornadoes to the Texas Legislature - and it was sometimes hard to tell the difference between them. As I covered political process, I found myself drawn, because I saw the impact that it had on people's lives - from the taxes paid to hours the parks were open. I covered political campaigns and the 1980 presidential race - and while some journalists become cynical about politics, I had the opposite experience - I found myself inspired by the good people I met from both political parties who were willing to put their names on the line, endure the criticism and bad headlines that inevitably come and get involved to try to make their communities and their country a better place. I decided I wanted to be part of that, so in 1984, I left reporting to become the Texas press coordinator for the Reagan-Bush campaign - since then I've worked for local, state and national campaigns and in the Texas Governor's office, at the White House and now at the State Department - So over the course of the 30 years of my career, I've had the opportunity to view the press and the government from, as the song says, both sides now.

And while those of us in government sometimes love to grumble about the latest headline or the way a story is written, we also recognize the vital importance of a free press to a free society. As Secretary Rice said recently, quote: "There is no more important pillar of democracy than a free and active press."

Freedom of the press is often called the First Freedom, and for good reason. -- in effect, it protects freedom of thought and expression. A free press is indispensable to a vigorous debate and an informed electorate. Journalists hold government officials to account -I think one of the best ethics tests ever devised is: would you be comfortable reading about this decision or action on the front page of tomorrow's newspaper - above the fold. Journalists expose corruption and crime, and shine a spotlight on human rights abuses. Perhaps for those very reasons, we are living in a time of great danger for journalists around the world - they are at greater risk than ever of being threatened, jailed or killed- the threats come from a variety of places -- organized crime, by terrorists, narco-traffickers, even sometimes by governments themselves.

This disturbing trend should set off alarm bells --- and a much louder international outcry. According to Reporters without Borders and the World Association of Newspapers, a record number -- more than 110 -- journalists and media workers were killed last year, marking 2006 as "the bloodiest year on record for journalism worldwide." In the last decade, more than 500 journalists have been killed.

One of the most prominently reported cases last year was the murder of Anna Politkovskaya the courageous Russian journalist who was shot execution-style last October. She was found dead in the elevator of her Moscow apartment building, shot four times. According to news reports, a pistol was left at her feet, the calling card of a contract killing.

Politkovskaya had been a fierce critic of the war in Chechnya and of the Russian Government. Her life had been threatened many times, yet she pressed on - slogging through snow and frozen creeks to get around border guards and slipping into one area by riding on a hay wagon with farm laborers. On the day of her murder, she had planned to file a lengthy story on torture practices believed to be being used by Chechen authorities. Her final media interview before her death was with Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, which has special poignancy for me. As part of my job, I represent Secretary Rice on the Broadcasting Board of Governors, which oversees those radios. Politkovskaya was a regular participant on the Russian service broadcasts of RFE/RL - one of the few electronic media outlets in Russia that would put her daring reports on the air. On the morning of her death, she told a friend she had awakened with the feeling that it would be the day she would die. Unfortunately, her reporter's instincts were right.

I mention her story first because it has become symbolic of the new brutality against journalists. Anna was recently selected by UNESCO as this year's recipient of the Guillermo Cano World Press Freedom Prize. We at the Department of State have renewed our call to the Russian government to conduct an immediate and thorough investigation of her murder. Those responsible must be identified and brought to justice.

Journalists like Anna Politkovskaya are on the front lines of human freedom. Yet while her story is perhaps the best known, she is unfortunately not alone.

In every region of the world, journalists are under siege. In Latin America -- five journalists in Venezuela have been killed in five years as the press has been restricted … others have been killed in Colombia, Guatemala, and Guyana. In Mexico, a half-dozen journalists have been killed in direct reprisal for their reporting. Last November, the editor of a newspaper there was found dead in a hotel room, with his hands tied behind his back, a day after his paper ran articles about organized crime and corruption in city government.

In Southeast Asia -- nine journalists have been killed in Pakistan alone since 2002, including Daniel Pearl, and more recently Mohammad Ismail, the bureau chief for Pakistan Press International in Islamabad. He was found with his head bashed in by an iron bar.

In the Middle East -- two leading journalists in Lebanon- Samir Kassir and Gebran Tueni - were murdered in 2005. Both were strong critics of Syrian interference in Lebanese affairs and champions of Lebanon's sovereignty and freedom.May Chidiac, aLebanese television reporter who had criticized Syria's involvement in Lebanon, was wounded by a bomb planted under the driver's seat of her car. She lost her left hand and her left leg. Chidiac was in the hospital nine months and endured 26 surgeries -- but with typical spirit, she said, "I gave my country a hand to fight with and a leg to kick all the enemies with, and they are not few." She went back on the air last summer, even though she was still receiving threats.

We are gravely concerned about the threats against journalists who work for information services like RFE/RL and the Voice of America - the lone source of credible news and information for people in some parts of the world VOA correspondents have been killed in Iraq, targeted in Zimbabwe, assaulted in Serbia, arrested [detained] in Angola, forced into hiding in Rwanda, forced out of Burundi, detained in Nigeria.

Just a few weeks ago, Khamail Muhsin, a talented broadcaster with Radio Free Iraq, was kidnapped and shot in Baghdad. She was a mother of three children and a brave voice for freedom of speech.

An RFE/RL Turkmen Service stringer was jailed by the government last year and died under suspicious circumstances. An RFE/RL Uzbek service correspondent was sentenced to six months in jail for allegedly insulting a security service employee while covering the 2005 violence against civilians in Andijon. News bureaus were shut down in Tashkent and Russian service correspondents have been detained.

As we meet here today, the Iranian government is refusing to allow RFE/RL journalist Parnaz Azima to leave Iran, where she went to visit her ailing and hospitalized mother. Iranian officials seized her passport when she arrived and have thus far refused to return it, telling her lawyer it would not be returned for "two or three years." We strongly object to Iranian officials keeping Parnaz Azima in Iran against her will and call on the government to allow her to leave the country so she can return to her work and most importantly, to her children and grandchildren.

A worldwide census last year showed that 134 journalists were imprisoned, a record high. In Burma, two men were sentenced to 19 years in prison simply for publishing a collection of pro-democracy poems. On March 12, Burmese journalist U Win Tin, imprisoned for almost 18 years by the military junta and in frail health, marked his 77th birthday behind bars.

The largest number of journalists - more than 30 -- imprisoned anywhere in the world are in China. Some 50 internet writers are also behind bars there. Despite progress on some fronts, China cannot yet be proud of its record on press freedom. It has taken a welcome step by announcing a temporary relaxation of regulations on foreign journalists to allow them to work more freely in advance of the 2008 Beijing Olympics, and when I visited China I spoke with government officials about our hope that this will become permanent to bring China closer to international standards.

The steady stream of reports that cross my desk confirm that journalists today face greater danger than ever before -- just last week, a dissident Cuban journalist was sentenced to four years in prison. In Turkmenistan, at least seven RFE/RL correspondents have had their land-line and mobile telephones blocked in recent weeks. Reporters say security officials are following them daily. And last week, an RFE/RL Belarus Service listener was arrested by the KGB for distributing materials promoting the radio programs. Belarus has become one of the world's most censored countries.

The United States is concerned that many governments are not only moving to silence individual voices, but also are suppressing independent media altogether - in Burma and North Korea, where there are no independent journalists; Syria allows almost no freedom for local press; and government severely restricts or controls the press in Tunisia, Eritrea, Zimbabwe, Uzbekistan, Cuba, and Equatorial Guinea. Controversial amendments to the media law in Kazakhstan tightened government control over the media, and the Emergency Law has partially restricted freedom of speech and press in Egypt

These worldwide threats to free press should be of great concern to the family of nations. They threaten, not just individual journalists, but civil society itself.

Silencing journalists - whether they write from Internet cafés, in literary journals, or newspapers - has a chilling effect. Information is suppressed and in this global world, information is vital. Stifling reports about cases of bird flu increases the risk for not only people in one country, but also people in every country. Killing reporters who investigate the drug trade has consequences beyond borders, encouraging the spread of organized crime. Assassinating reporters who unmask government misdeeds allows corruption to grow and impact an expanding circle of businesses and individuals.

What should we all do? One of the most important things we can do is to shine a spotlight on the problem - build awareness of the threats to journalists and the critical need for a free and vibrant press.

Media groups including the World Association of Newspapers, the Committee to Protect Journalists and Reporters without Borders have been speaking out and protesting to governments with admirable resolve.

The linkage between a free press and democracy and development has been gaining more attention in international bodies such as UNESCO, the WTO, and the World Bank An even stronger focus is warranted.

The United States government is fully committed to strengthening the important role of free media. Access to information and transparency are so important to developing countries that we track media freedom as a key part of our annual Human Rights Report - reporting and denouncing violations. We are working to build a stronger foundation for international press freedom by providing assistance for production of radio and television programs that are independent of state-controlled media, and funding programs for Internet access and training.

With freedom comes responsibility, of course, and journalists have a responsibility to be fair and accurate. The US government supports many non-government organizations that provide training in standards of fairness and objectivity for journalists, editors and media managers from countries worldwide. In partnership with the Aspen Institute and a number of journalism schools, we have launched a new program the Edward R. Murrow Journalism Program, to provide advanced training for foreign journalists -nearly 200 of them just completed a three week visit to America, meeting with policymakers, receiving training in professional standards of objective reporting and learning more about our country.

And I am pleased to report that in the future we will provide spaces in our Edward R. Murrow journalism program for the survivors of slain journalists who choose to study journalism or become journalists themselves. Their work will keep the spirit of freedom of expression alive.

I'm glad that Under Secretary Paula Dobriansky could be here earlier today to talk about threats to internet freedom. Last February, Secretary Rice launched the Global Internet Freedom Task Force (GIFT), recognizing that internet freedom is a key component of press freedom. The U.S. is overall committed to supporting innovative approaches to combating internet censorship, such as developing a secure website for journalists and human rights defenders in closed countries.

One of our most important roles at the State Department is to defend the defenders of freedom. When governments move to limit press freedoms, we are speaking out forcefully. President Bush has personally asked the Chinese government to release New York Times researcher Zhao Yan. Secretary Rice met with the colleagues and son of Anna Politkovskaya to express her condolences during her visit to Moscow and did the first interview with Lebanese journalist May Chidiac when she came back to work. When the Government of Azerbaijan closed that country's leading TV and radio station, ANS, last fall, our government officials including me protested at many levels. Today, ANS is back on the air

This week, on May 3, the world will observe World Press Freedom Day, to honor the brave journalists from Belarus to Cuba to Iran who are struggling valiantly for the right to express themselves and to inform the citizens of their nations

The message must go out that the world cares about press freedom, not just on Press Freedom Day, but every day, to signal that people are watching and pressing governments for full accountability for attacks against journalists and against a free press.

Just before he was murdered in January, Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink apparently sensed he was in danger and wrote his last column about the death threats he was receiving. When he was shot dead the next week outside his newspaper office, thousands of people poured into the streets and the Turkish Prime Minister condemned the shooting as an attack on peace and the stability of the country. As he put it, "A bullet was fired at freedom of thought and democratic life."

So to all the courageous journalists -- writers, editors, producers, cameramen, - who are daily risking their lives in many countries, we want you to know that America stands with you in supporting free of thought and democratic life. We want to be your partners and supporters in keeping freedom of the press and thus freedom of thought and expression flourishing.

Thank you.

Probe into Pakistani journalist's murder demanded

Today: Thursday June 07, 2007

Probe into Pakistani journalist's murder demanded

Islamabad, Nov 3, IRNA

Pakistan-Journalist Murder
The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has urged an immediate, high-level investigation into the murder of Mohammad Ismail, Islamabad bureau chief for Pakistan Press International (PPI).

Ismail's body was found Wednesday morning near his office in Islamabad with his head completely smashed with some hard blunt object according to Mazhar Abbas, secretary-general of the Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists.

A police investigator said an iron bar may have been used as a weapon.

Ismail, nearing retirement, was last seen when he left his house to take a late evening walk.

Doctors who received the body when it was taken to hospital told PFUJ that Ismail had been dead a few hours before the body was discovered.

Ismail's family says that they were at a loss as to what could have prompted the attack.

Ismail was carrying little of value when he was assaulted.

Ismail's news agency is not known for particularly critical reporting of the government, CPJ research shows
Mohammad Ismail's murder must be fully investigated, said Joel Simon, CPJ's executive director.

An alarming number of Pakistani journalists have been killed with impunity in the last four years.

The government must show that it is determined to end this very poor record by waging a timely and thorough investigation.

The New York-based CPJ records show that at least nine journalists have been killed for their work beginning in 2002, when U.S.

Journalist Daniel Pearl was kidnapped and brutally slain.

Only in the Pearl case has the government carried out an extensive investigation, made arrests, and won convictions.

During a CPJ mission to Pakistan in July, officials promised to review investigative records and reveal government information on the deaths of Pakistani journalists killed.

News sent: 09:09 Friday November 03, 2006

Year 2006 most brutal for media

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Year 2006 most brutal for media
PAKISTAN » civil society » 17 May 2007
LAHORE-The International Press Institute (IPI) in its latest report on the state of media, has termed 2006 as the “most savage and brutal year” for journalists in the modern history of the media, which saw 100 journalists killed across the globe.
The IPI, an institute dedicated to safeguarding press freedom across the world, has also bracketed Pakistan with five countries where violence against journalists has become a hallmark of governments. Other four being Afghanistan, Philippines, Mexico, and Sri Lanka.
The report says that in Pakistan where four journalists were killed this year, IPI has also been concerned about the disappearance of journalists. In numerous cases this year, journalists were abducted by the authorities, in some cases for months, without informing anyone of their whereabouts or the reason for their abduction.
In its report on India, it has been stated that laws are still regularly passed that pose threats to press freedom and to journalists who report on illegal activities or on sensitive religious issues. These journalists are regularly attacked and harassed by local leaders or independent political and religious groups.
The killing of two journalists this year in India and physical attacks on many others is a clear proof that tolerance is far from being widespread and press freedom is not always respected as a universal right and a higher value in Indian society, it further says.
About Bangladesh, the report says that country has seen an increase in attacks against the press by members of radical Islamist groups in recent years however, much of the violence against journalists is carried out by supporters of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP).
With regard to over all state of press freedom in Asia, the said institute has described the situation in this part of world as “one step forward, two steps back”, marking it a region where violence and even the killing of journalists have become so common that they are dealt with by authorities as lesser crimes or, on occasions, ignored.
According to the report, impunity is a major problem in some Asian countries, where violence and even the killing of journalists have become so common that they are dealt with by authorities as lesser crimes or, on occasion, ignored. The Philippines, Bangladesh, and Pakistan are typical examples of this phenomenon.
Pakistan-2006 World Press Freedom Review
Violence against journalists in Pakistan has reached unprecedented levels. Indeed, the impunity towards those who commit crimes against journalists has contributed to this escalation in violence. Nine journalists have been killed in Pakistan in the past five years, and in only one case, that of Daniel Pearl, has the murder been thoroughly investigated due to international pressure.
Crimes against the media take many forms in Pakistan. In the most perverse development, in two separate cases this year, the younger brothers of two journalists were murdered in connection with their brothers’ profession. At the same time, journalists are being abducted by the authorities, in some cases for months, without informing anyone of their whereabouts or the reason for their abduction.
Four journalists were killed this year in Pakistan. Two of them, Munir Ahmed Sangi and Hayatullah Khan, were murdered in connection with their reports, while the reason for the murder of Maqbool Hussain Sial and Mohammad Ismail remains uncertain.
Munir Ahmed Sangi, a cameraman for the Sindhi-language Kawish Television Network (KTN), was shot on May 30, while covering a clash between members of the Unar and Abro tribes in the town of Larkana, southeast Pakistan. Police said Sangi had been killed in the crossfire, although colleagues believed he might have been deliberately targeted because of his station’s critical reporting. One of Sangi’s colleagues was attacked shortly before Sangi’s murder in connection with KTN’s reports.
Hayatullah Khan, a reporter for the Urdu-language daily Ausaf and a freelance photographer, was found dead on 16 June in the North WazIPIstan town of Mir Ali. He was abducted by unidentified gunmen on 5th December 2005, after reporting that a US missile had killed a senior al-Qaeda figure. Khan’s report contradicted official Pakistani reports that the al-Qaeda operative died in a bomb-making accident. Khan, who was handcuffed and shot in the back of the head, had received numerous threats from Pakistani security forces, Islamic militants, and local tribesmen because of his reporting.
On September 26, Hayatullah Khan’s younger brother, Bashir Khan, was murdered in what appears to be a warning to Hayatullah Khan’s family to stop putting pressure on the authorities for an investigation into the journalist’s murder.
Less than one month earlier, on August 31, Taimor Khan, the 16 year old brother of BBC correspondent Dilawar Khan, was found tortured and murdered in South WazIPIstan, two days after he had been kidnapped on his way home from school. According to reports, Dilawar, who also works for Pakistan’s Daily Dawn, had received numerous threats in the previous two years because of his reports and had been pressurised by local authorities and militants to leave WazIPIstan, as many other journalists had been forced to do.
On 16 December 2005, a bomb exploded in Khan’s house after he had reported about the unsatisfactory state of affairs in the area. Furthermore, in February 2005, two journalists in the same car as Khan were killed, when shots were fired at their vehicle. Khan himself was unhurt. In yet another attack against the journalist, on November 20, Khan was kidnapped by unidentified abductors, who blindfolded, kicked and slapped him and questioned him about his reporting and his sources before releasing him on the next day, the Pakistan Press Foundation (PPF) reported.
Maqbool Hussain Sial, a correspondent with the news agency On-Line, was shot by unidentified gunmen on 15 September and died on his way to the hospital. According to a police investigation into the murder, two masked gunmen on a motorcycle shot Sial at Dera Ismail Khan, 175 miles Southwest of Islamabad WHEN he was on his way to interview a leader of the Pakistan People’s Party Parliamentarians at the Dera Ismail Khan Press Club. The motive for the killing remains unclear. The police noted that Sial was a Shia and he could have been killed by members of the majority Sunni community because of his religious affiliation.
Six weeks after Sial’s murder, on November 1, Mohammad Ismail, Islamabad bureau chief for the independent news agency, Pakistan Press International (PPI), was found dead near his home in Islamabad. He had been hit on the head with a hard blunt object, sources said. In addition, in Ismail’s case, the motive for his killing remains unknown and police have made no arrest in connection with his case.
Abduction of journalists is common in Pakistan. This year, at least six journalists, known for covering issues that anger the government, mysteriously disappeared. Mehruddin Marri, Saeed Sarbazi, Mukesh Rupeta and Sanjay Kumar were kidnapped and tortured before being released; Hayatullah Khan was found murdered after being held incommunicado for six months; Munir Mengal was still missing till the end of the year.
Mehruddin Marri, a journalist for the Sindhi newspaper Kawish, was abducted on 27 June and released on 24 October after being interrogated and tortured by military intelligence officers for four months in an attempt to make him confess ties with the Baloch nationalist movement, the news agency Pakistan Press Information Services reported.
A guerrilla uprising among ethnic Baloch seeking greater rights for their community worsened in the past year, and secret, open-ended detentions of nonviolent Baluch activists have increased. In connection with the clampdown on Baloch activists was the detention of Munir Mengal on 4th
April. Mengal was detained by officials at the airport on his return returning from meetings to set up a Baluch-language TV station to be based in Dubai and has since then disappeared.
Furthermore, the joint secretary of the Karachi Press Club, Saeed Sarbazi, who is also the senior sub-editor of the daily Business Recorder and member of the All Pakistan Newspapers Employees Confederations National Executive Committee, was abducted by intelligence agencies on 20 September and released three days later, after being beaten and kicked until unconscious.
Sarbazi said he had told his abductors he was a journalist but they insisted he was a terrorist, PPF reported. The journalist said he was interrogated about his personal and professional life and his connection with the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA). Sarbazi tried to explain that he had made telephone calls as part of his journalistic assignments after the killing of Baloch leader Akbar Bugti in an army operation.
On 6 March, Mukesh Rupeta, a reporter with the independent television station Geo News, and freelance cameraman Sanjay Kumar went missing on March 6 and were detained incommunicado until June 22, when their arrest was officially announced. Rupeta and Kumar were detained while filming the Jacobabad airbase in Sindh province, where the US military has equipment and troops. They were admitted to hospital on June 22 due to their deteriorating health and released on bail on the following day. Journalists in Pakistan have also been beaten by police this year and assaulted by a minister’s guards.
ARY TV reporter Wadood Mushtaq, as well as ATV reporter, Nazir Awan, and ATV cameraman, Zahid Malik, were brutally assaulted and severely injured by police while they were reporting on a public rally by a religious political party in Lahore on September 17. Four days earlier, on September 13, C.R. Shamsi, Islamabad deputy editor of the daily Ausaf and former secretary-general of the Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists, was assaulted and injured by armed guards of labour minister Sarwar Khan. Shamsi said he was trying to inform the minister about an upcoming journalists’ demonstration.
The minister denied the charges. “I feel sorry for the manhandling of C.R. Shamsi. But I was in no way involved in it. Those who thrashed him were not my men. It actually happened after I had left the scene following a hot conversation with the journalist,” Sarwar Khan explained.
However, Shamsi said the minister had ordered his armed guards to hit him when the journalist asked Sarwar Khan to take measures for the implementation of newspaper employees 7th wage award, a matter related to the labour ministry, the Business Recorder reported.
In an act that shows great disrespect for the journalism profession in Pakistan, on June 29, supporters of the ruling Pakistan Muslim League (PML-QA) attacked Peshawar’s press club leaving several journalists injured. According to PPF, the attack took place during a press conference by Haji Ulas Khan, president of PML-Q’s dissident bloc, and fellow party dissidents Zikria Khan and Ihsanullah. When journalists asked the intruders to leave the club premises, they and dissident party members were beaten.
This was not the first attack on a press club in Pakistan. On June 14, a mob entered the Press Club in Thari Mirwah, a small town located in the southern province of Sindh. The asSialants started punching, kicking and beating journalists with sticks. They ransacked the press club damaging furniture and equipment. The intruders chanted slogans against journalists, PPF reported. According to local journalists, the attack was connected to a news story about the use of substandard material by contractors in the construction of irrigation watercourses.
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