http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory?id=4166056


Last Banned Pakistani TV Network on Air
Last of Pakistani TV Networks Banned During Emergency Rule Resumes
Service in Deal With Gov't
By CHRIS BRUMMITT
The Associated Press
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan


Pakistan's most popular private television network went back on the
air Monday after signing a government code of conduct that critics say
is muzzling independent media before parliamentary elections next
month.

All stations banned by President Pervez Musharraf during his state of
emergency in November are now broadcasting again, but concerns remain
that the former general has whittled away at press freedoms as his
loyalists campaign against parties opposed to his continued rule.

Among other things, the code bans live coverage of demonstrations and
programs that "defame or ridicule" the head of state. It also says
anchors and talk show hosts must not express opinions that threaten
Pakistan's sovereignty and security.

Musharraf's administration said Geo TV was allowed to resume
operations after agreeing to those guidelines.

The station declined to comment on whether there were any conditions,
with its president saying only that the government's lifting of the
ban was "a wise and wonderful move."

"As elections are coming up, more media coverage would make the
elections more credible and contribute to the positive development of
the country," said Geo President Imran Aslam.

The international media watchdog Reporters Without Borders said Geo
agreed to stop running programs featuring two independent-minded
commentators in return for the lifting of the ban.

"This constitutes yet further evidence that censorship is
unfortunately still the rule just a few weeks before the parliamentary
elections scheduled for Feb. 18," the Paris-based group said in a
statement.

Immediately after emergency rule was imposed, Geo was banned along
with all private news networks, which had been reporting freely on
growing challenges to Musharraf's U.S.-backed rule as well as surging
violence by Muslim extremists.

Over the ensuing 10 weeks, the government permitted the other stations
to return to the air as they signed the code of conduct, but Geo
initially refused to go along.

Media professor Mehdi Hasan said Geo finally gave in because it was
being crippled financially by the ban.

"The jobs of hundreds of people were threatened," Hasan said. "They
must have felt being absent from the scene for so long would affect
their popularity."

Despite the media crackdown, Geo had managed to broadcast via
satellite and over the Internet, but its programs were not available
on cable TV, so were not seen by the vast majority of Pakistanis.

Geo's two entertainment channels were restored last month, but its
news and sports channels were blocked until Monday.

While there are restrictions, the media is in some respects freer in
Pakistan than in many other Asian countries.

Newspapers and TV stations report freely on anti-government protests,
opinion pages are full of articles calling on Musharraf to step down
and opposition leaders are frequently quoted alleging he is a
dictator.

Still, journalists involved in investigative reporting on sensitive
topics say they face intimidation and threats.

Musharraf himself frequently cites the country's burgeoning private
media as evidence of his democratic credentials. When he seized power
while commander of Pakistan's military eight years ago, there was only
one TV station, a state-run service that broadcast mostly government
propaganda.

During a Monday speech in Brussels, Belgium, Musharraf urged the West
to be less critical of his efforts, saying Pakistan needs time to
achieve higher standards of human rights and civil liberties.

"You have taken centuries to reach it," he said at the start of an
eight-day European tour.

Geo, the most popular private TV network, provided live coverage of
the anti-Musharraf protests in the months before the state of
emergency. It also frequently allowed critics to voice attacks on the
president.

Geo's offices were raided by police last March after it aired live
coverage of clashes between police and lawyers challenging Musharraf's
removal of Iftikhar Mohammed Chaudhry, the Supreme Court's chief
justice who had challenged the leader's dominance.

Fellow judges later ordered Chaudhry reinstated, but he was ousted
from his judicial post again when Musharraf imposed emergency rule
Nov. 3 and remains detained at his official residence in Islamabad.

The parliamentary elections Feb. 18 are seen as key to Pakistan's
transition to democracy and come at a time of rising attacks by
al-Qaida and Taliban militants, including the Dec. 27 gun and bomb
assault that killed opposition leader Benazir Bhutto.


Associated Press Writer Zarar Khan contributed to this report.

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