http://dawn.com/2012/12/31/pakistan-most-unsafe-place-for-newsmen-in-s-asia/

‘Pakistan most unsafe place for newsmen in S Asia’
>From the Newspaper | Our Staff Reporter | 2 days ago 


 
Camera with blood smeared on it.—AFP Photo

LAHORE: South Asia, the most volatile region, mourned the murder of 25 media 
persons, with Pakistan again remaining on the top with its 13 journalists 
losing their lives during 2012.

This has been stated in the South Asia Media Commission’s (SAMC) Media Monitor 
2012 report which was made public by the body’s Secretary General M Ziauddin 
here on Sunday.

The report was simultaneously launched in all eight countries of South Asia. 
The launch, attended by senior journalists from all the four provinces and the 
tribal areas of the country, coincided with annual meeting of Media 
Commission-Pakistan, the local chapter of the SAMC.

According to the report, five journalists were killed in India, three in 
Bangladesh and two each in Nepal and Afghanistan. Though luckily no journalist 
was killed in Sri Lanka, Bhutan and the Maldives, media persons there continued 
to face professional challenges and hazards.

The media also came under scrutiny for laxity in professionalism in achieving 
accuracy and being unbiased.

Despite the UN Security Council’s adoption of Resolution 1738 in 2006, which 
stressed the need to protect journalists in dangerous areas, violence against 
them, their physical security remained a major issue and one of the biggest 
threats to freedom of expression in most of South Asia.

Those killed in Pakistan included Saqib Khan, Ummat, (Karachi), Rehmatullah 
Abid, Dunya News, (Pujngor), Mushtaq Khand, Dharti Television Network, (Mehran, 
Khairpur, Sindh), Abdul Haq Baloch, ARY Television, (Khuzdar), Abdul Qadir 
Hajizai, Wash TV (Quetta), Razzaq Gul, Express News TV, (Turbat), Mukarram Khan 
Aatif, Freelance, (Shabqadar), Mohammad Amir, ARY News (Peshawar), Aurangzeb 
Tunio, Kawaish Television Network, (Lalu Ranwak) Tariq Kamal, reporter for a 
local Sindhi newspaper (Karachi), Syed Tariq Hussain (Karachi), Aslam Raja 
(Karachi) and Jamshed Kharal (Quetta).

The report said journalists in Pakistan faced pressures from all sides. 
Historically, it was the state power which curbed freedom of speech and 
attacked journalists. Now journalists are under attack from non-state actors 
also. Press freedom has made journalists more audacious in performing their job 
which, in turn, has also made them a very threatened lot. Killings with 
impunity aside, there have been various incidents of attacks on media houses 
and threats and violence against media persons with perpetrators remaining 
unscathed. There have also been reports of journalists sustaining injuries in 
protests and bomb blasts.

Violent protests that erupted against the anti-Islam film “Innocence of 
Muslims” in September took a heavy toll on media professionals in Pakistan. One 
media worker was killed and many others were injured as they covered the 
protests that turned violent in many cities of the country. Journalists were 
beaten and dragged by protesters who complained that they were not being given 
proper coverage.

Other than the physical threats, the pressures on the media are tremendous, the 
repot says.

It says the ban on YouTube in Pakistan imposed on September 17 was meant to 
pacify incensed emotions following the release of the anti-Islam film. The knee 
jerk reaction served no purpose other than keeping citizens barred from 
accessing the service and using it for knowledge, it says, adding several proxy 
websites that allow users to bypass the ban soared following the imposition of 
curb.

To ensure a free and fair space for public discourse, the report suggests a 
participatory approach in drafting cyber laws. It also urges defining of the 
terms like “blasphemy,” “morality” and “national security”.

It deplores the government’s failure to introduce a reformed Access to 
Information law and repeal of other laws and regulations hampering media 
freedom. It terms the draft law to be presented in the Punjab Assembly quite 
prohibitive and unacceptable to the media and the people.

It also mentions federal government’s inability to deregulate the corporations 
running the state-owned media – Radio Pakistan, Pakistan Television. They have 
to be made autonomous and genuine public service outlets before the elections, 
it demanded.

It says journalists in Pakistan do not enjoy economic freedom, with owners 
holding strong sway over content and the marketing staff deciding the editorial 
content in many media houses. Most journalists work against inadequate salaries 
and have contractual jobs, it points out, saying these factors, too, undermined 
press freedom.

It lauds media in Pakistan for carrying out its public watchdog functions 
Energetically, saying some negative trends must, however, be highlighted.

About electronic media, it says a lot of analysis by TV anchors is without any 
research backing it, suggesting the media organisations must get used to hiring 
experts instead of using non-expert political figures simply to save money.

The TV channels and the Urdu press have still to discuss the problem of 
terrorism in a balanced manner, the report points out.

Despite ample empirical evidence and daily violence against innocent people, 
worship places, schools, markets and most sensitive security installations, 
many media persons tend to obfuscate the reality with their speculative 
presentations and portrayal and conspiracy theories, it says.

Isolationism while discussing foreign policy and internal events with 
international effect like the Malala Yousafzai affair was allowed to be 
confused with farfetched erroneous linkages to the war on terror, the report 
says. A moral, social and political consensus needed on such occasions was thus 
undermined and the Taliban, who accepted the responsibility for the ghastly 
act, were allowed to run away with their incorrigible standpoint despite a 
heavy moral loss of the militant outfit, it adds. Even the role of UN was cast 
in a bad light by some of the discussants, it regrets.

It points out the elected government was exposed to a regular assault in the 
name of accountability by TV anchors who, it says chose to take sides in the 
discussions.

It says the media was inexpert in handling the activism of the superior 
judiciary and failed in its duty of presenting an informed discourse on some of 
the judgments that “were more populist and political in nature” and created 
sharp divisions even among the juridical community. It took without demur the 
judicial intervention in setting standards of morality and piety  in the media 
by curtailing entertainment after calling it ‘obscenity’, the report says.

No objective analysis is made of the inadequacy of the definition of obscenity 
in a state where people need entertainment while endangered by terrorism and 
suffocated by obscurantism, it observes.

It says reporters are allowed undue exposure while expounding their political 
views in violation of the vows of neutrality of the media.

Similarly, it says, no informed debate is attempted on such matters as 
price-fixing by the judiciary. Nowhere is media dereliction more observable 
than in refusing to acknowledge that avoidance of subsidy is important for the 
survival of the economy, it adds.

It says the media errs by not first inquiring into the definition of the term 
before accusing the government of ‘bad governance’.

No distinction is made about corruption inherent to the system and its 
auxiliary personalized variant, the report mentions, adding the issue of 
corruption became an instrument in the hands of unscrupulous elements for 
mudslinging on the basis of speculations.

The topic of ratings is already bringing negative returns to the media in the 
shape of viewer cynicism. The biggest flaw in the media is the practice of 
sensationalism in crime, government, civil society and religious stories, it 
observes.

Unfortunately, the report says, the blackmailing aspects of some TV anchors 
have come to light and the viewing public has been afforded an opportunity to 
see the phenomenon on screen. But, instead of being subjected to accountability 
the offenders have been rewarded with better contracts, it deplores.

The report finds it ironic that sections of media are now in the forefront of 
imposing various kinds of restrictions and censorship on the media itself on 
ideological and cultural grounds, negating pluralism and diversity.

It terms insurgency-hit Balochistan and the northern parts of Pakistan most 
dangerous areas with a range of threats and trauma growing. Journalists in 
these areas had to steer a perilous course between hostile elements losing 13 
of their peers, it says.

The report says in India five killings pointed to the dangers journalism faced 
apart from the constant pressure of commercialisation. Tensions persist in the 
conflict prone regions such as Kashmir. In the northeastern states, hazards for 
journalists seeking to balance their stories have increased from both the 
Maoist  cadre and the security agencies. Also, journalists there have almost no 
professional security, it mentions.

In Afghanistan, the report says, journalism remained a hazardous pursuit with 
one journalist found decapitated and another killed in a roadside bomb blast. 
The Afghan media has grown rapidly during the last decade, courtesy mostly 
foreign funding, it adds. It says with the endgame being near several media 
outlets have closed in the country. Uncertainty allowed little in the way of 
public-spirited journalism to take root or grow there, it adds.


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