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OpinionsPakistan dangerous region for journalists

Pakistan dangerous region for journalists

Date:

Strangely in December 2020, the Pakistani court ordered the immediate release of
four men, including Omar Sheikh, accused of orchestrating kidnapping and killing

of American journalist Daniel Pearl.

BY R C GANJOO

In Pakistan, journalism has been a discredited pillar of the nation. In Pakistan, there is no news and no journalism. Only partisan
and favoritism.
There has been constant hate spewing across networks. Pakistan has long been unsafe for journalists. It ranked ninth on the
Committee to Protect Journalists 2020 global impunity index, an annual assessment of countries where journalists are regularly killed and
the assailants go free.
Pakistan is among the top 10 nations in the in terms of the total number of unsolved murders of journalists. The Committee has
ranked Pakistan 9th on this year's Global Impunity Index.
Behind the killing of Pakistani journalist Arshad Sharif in Nairobi on October 23, the accusation finger indicates the involvement of
Pakistan's secret agency ISI which has been a master in the past for such acts of getting someone executed anywhere anytime. Sharif,
who was once close to the military establishment, became one of its fiercest critics in 2022 during his tenure in ARY Network.
One fine day, he was taken off air after his show was accused of fanning “anti-military sentiment” on lame excuses. Sharif after leaving
the job was kept on the intelligence radar. He filed a petition saying the security forces were violating his fundamental rights. A court in
Islamabad asked Pakistan's intelligence agency and police in August to stop harassing Sharif. Police and government sources confirmed
at the time that he was being sought in a complaint case but said no action had been carried out to arrest him. Sharif eventually fled the
country in August after allegedly receiving death threats over his work. His whereabouts were not known publicly.
The kidnapping of American Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl in Karachi on January 23, 2002 and subsequent murder on
February 1, 2002, has not been forgotten nor has how the Pakistan establishment planned his killing by terrorists.
Daniel Pearl in Karachi, following an investigative lead while working in post-9/11 Pakistan, was committed by several Islamist jihadist
groups working in collaboration. Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh known as Umar Sheikh, Sheikh Omar Sheik Syed alias Mustafa Muhammad
Ahmad a British Pakistani terrorist a member of the Islamist jihadist group Harkat-ul-Ansar or Harkat-ul-Mujahideen in the 1990s, and later
of Jaish-e-Mohammed and closely associated with Al-Qaeda, was assigned the task. Sheikh was arrested by Pakistani police on
February 12, 2002, in Lahore, in connection with the Pearl kidnapping and was sentenced to death on 15 July 2002 by a special judge of
an anti-terrorism court for the murder. Strangely in December 2020, the Pakistani court ordered the immediate release of four men,
including Omar Sheikh, accused of orchestrating kidnapping and killing of journalist Daniel Pearl.
Similarly, the Nairobi police have been managed by ISI to cover the incident by describing the case as that of mistaken identity,
according to an intelligence expert. Shireen Mazari, a former human rights minister in Pakistan, in his tweet has said “Let there be no
confusion, Arshad Sharif was murdered by a sniper bullet to his head. It was not an accident as is now being floated.”
In recent years, subsequent governments and other influential powers have curtailed media freedom and threatened journalistic
independence in Pakistan. According to reports, between May 2021 and April 2022, at least 86 cases of attacks and violations against
media and its practitioners, including journalists, took place in Pakistan. Reportedly, 118 journalists have been killed in Pakistan since the
year 2000.
In February 2020, journalist Aziz Memon was murdered in Mehrabpur, Sindh. Shortly before he was killed, he released a video
statement in which he allegedly claimed that the “SSP Nowshero Feroz and local political supporters have made his life hell and that his
kids have been receiving threats repeatedly.”
In 2011, journalist Saleem Shehzad was found dead, 4 days after his story on the PNS Mehran attack surfaced in which he claimed
that Al-Qaeda had allegedly penetrated inside the Pakistan Navy.
In 2011, journalist Wali Khan Babar was shot dead for his reporting on crimes in Karachi. Journalist Javed Chaudhry revealed that
“before Saleem Shehzad's death, he had allegedly told his family that if he gets abducted or harmed, then ISI would be responsible for it.”
Islamabad has emerged as the most dangerous place to practice journalism in Pakistan with 37 per cent of the violations (32 out of the
total of 86 cases) recorded in the federal capital. Sindh is the second-worst with 27 per cent of the violations (23 cases) and Khyber-
Pakhtunkhwa (K-P) the third most dangerous with 19 per cent (16 cases). It is pertinent to note here that most of these killings are linked
with reporting on hardcore issues in Pakistan.
(R C Ganjoo is a senior journalist and columnist having more than 30 years experience of covering issues concerning security,
particularly Kashmir. He has worked with several prominent media groups and his articles have been published in many national and
publications.)
Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this article are the personal opinions of the author. The facts and opinions appearing in the
article do not reflect the views of OneIndia and OneIndia does not assume any responsibility or liability for the same.

www.oneindia.com

Northlines
Northlines
The Northlines is an independent source on the Web for news, facts and figures relating to Jammu, Kashmir and Ladakh and its neighbourhood.

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