Bill On Journalists Protection In KP Would Be Tabled Soon: Barrister Saif

Press Release

PESHAWAR, 26 June: Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf announced Wednesday that a bill on protection of journalists would be tabled in the provincial assembly to combat impunity for crimes against media and its practitioners in the province.

“The provincial government will table the bill on safety of journalists in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Assembly soon,” Muhammad Ai Saif, advisor to KP Chief Minister Ali Amin Gandapur on information, told a conference on “Safety of Journalists in Merged Tribal Districts” held by Freedom Network to launch its report on the impact on media in the tribal districts of five years of merger of ex-FATA into Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

Barrister Saif agreed to work with an Action Committee, set up at the conference, to discuss proposals to include in the bill. The Committee includes presidents of Khyber Union of Journalists, Peshawar Press Club, Tribal Union of Journalists and Pakistan Journalists Safety Coalition.

The 92-page report launched on the occasion, authored by Aurangzaib Khan, noted that press freedom situation and safety of journalists in tribal districts did not improve in the last five years since the erstwhile Federally Administered Tribal Areas were merged in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

The report “Newstribes of Northwest – Saving Journalism in Pakistan’s Tribal Districts” was released at a meeting of Pakistan Journalists Safety Coalition (PJSC-Khyber Pakhtunkhwa chapter in Peshawar on Wednesday.

“In 2006, the government wanted journalists to take measures for their safety. In 2014, journalists were losing sleep for want of peace. In 2023, they are back to square one. One or the other party to the conflict is unhappy with media in tribal areas,” the report said.

KP Minister for Religious Affairs Sahibzada Muhammad Adnan Qadri told the conference that safety challenges of journalists “are the same that residents of tribal districts face which means everyone should work together to resolve the security challenges.”

“The purpose of this report was to understand how political mainstreaming of former tribal areas impacted the tribal media and its practitioners. It addressed two questions: state of freedom of expression and safety of journalists,” Iqbal Khattak, Executive Director of Freedom Network told the meeting.

The report said: “Not much changed on both counts.” It added: “The merger did not strengthen media. It strengthened tribes, maliks or elders and warlords. The merger did not strengthen rule of law nor the media and its practitioners.”

Return of militancy sparked “calls for peace and state suppressed freedom of expression not allowing media to report these calls,” the report said in a reference to undeclared official ban on media to report a citizens’ movement for fundamental rights.

“Space for media and journalism has shrunk drastically in the merged districts after resurgence of TTP (Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan),” the report underlined suggesting that political integration helped media little to free from state and non-state actors’ threatening behaviours.

Increasingly, the report highlighted, journalists “do not proactively but wait for institutions – the administration, the ISPR – to release information to them. We do not take risks ourselves to probe or push for information. By now we are all clear about what our limits are,” interviews with around 50 tribal journalists and the report author’s visits to all tribal districts concluded.

“Self-censorship is rampant. Local stories get censored,” these journalists spoke of limited freedom to report from the most troubled parts of the country.

Visibly traumatized, these journalists cope with tribal traditions, coupled with official backing and interference also as tribal Lashkar might expel a journalist and impose fine if any report was seen against the rawayat or tradition. “Same mindset still prevails which was under the FCR” or Frontier Crimes Regulations law, the report warned.

Ban on media to report freely from merged districts brought technology to use with social networking applications helped citizens from these districts to be heard. However, frequently shutdown of Internet forced journalists to travel back to nearby cities to file their stories.

Gender in media was grossly disproportionate or merely symbolic. There are women journalists reporting merged districts but they mainly live in bordering districts for safety reasons.

A resolution was also passed at the meeting calling on CM Ali Amin Gandapur-led provincial government to urgently table a bill on protection of journalists to combat impunity for crimes against journalists in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

Khyber Union of Journalists President Nasir Hussain, Peshawar Press Club President Arshad Aziz, Tribal Union of Journalists President Qazi Fazlullah and PJSC-Khyber chapter President Saiful Islam Saifi also addressed the conference.

The report “Newstribes of Northwest – Saving Journalism in Pakistan’s Tribal Districts” was released at a meeting of Pakistan Journalists Safety Coalition (PJSC-Khyber Pakhtunkhwa chapter in Peshawar on Wednesday.

“In 2006, the government wanted journalists to take measures for their safety. In 2014, journalists were losing sleep for want of peace. In 2023, they are back to square one. One or the other party to the conflict is unhappy with media in tribal areas,” the report said.

KP Minister for Religious Affairs Sahibzada Muhammad Adnan Qadri told the conference that safety challenges of journalists “are the same that residents of tribal districts face which means everyone should work together to resolve the security challenges.”

“The purpose of this report was to understand how political mainstreaming of former tribal areas impacted the tribal media and its practitioners. It addressed two questions: state of freedom of expression and safety of journalists,” Iqbal Khattak, Executive Director of Freedom Network told the meeting.

The report said: “Not much changed on both counts.” It added: “The merger did not strengthen media. It strengthened tribes, maliks or elders and warlords. The merger did not strengthen rule of law nor the media and its practitioners.”

Return of militancy sparked “calls for peace and state suppressed freedom of expression not allowing media to report these calls,” the report said in a reference to undeclared official ban on media to report a citizens’ movement for fundamental rights.

“Space for media and journalism has shrunk drastically in the merged districts after resurgence of TTP (Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan),” the report underlined suggesting that political integration helped media little to free from state and non-state actors’ threatening behaviours.

Increasingly, the report highlighted, journalists “do not proactively but wait for institutions – the administration, the ISPR – to release information to them. We do not take risks ourselves to probe or push for information. By now we are all clear about what our limits are,” interviews with around 50 tribal journalists and the report author’s visits to all tribal districts concluded.

“Self-censorship is rampant. Local stories get censored,” these journalists spoke of limited freedom to report from the most troubled parts of the country.

Visibly traumatized, these journalists cope with tribal traditions, coupled with official backing and interference also as tribal Lashkar might expel a journalist and impose fine if any report was seen against the rawayat or tradition. “Same mindset still prevails which was under the FCR” or Frontier Crimes Regulations law, the report warned.

Ban on media to report freely from merged districts brought technology to use with social networking applications helped citizens from these districts to be heard. However, frequently shutdown of Internet forced journalists to travel back to nearby cities to file their stories.

Gender in media was grossly disproportionate or merely symbolic. There are women journalists reporting merged districts but they mainly live in bordering districts for safety reasons.

A resolution was also passed at the meeting calling on CM Ali Amin Gandapur-led provincial government to urgently table a bill on protection of journalists to combat impunity for crimes against journalists in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

Khyber Union of Journalists President Nasir Hussain, Peshawar Press Club President Arshad Aziz, Tribal Union of Journalists President Qazi Fazlullah and PJSC-Khyber chapter President Saiful Islam Saifi also addressed the conference.

Caption: Advisor to KP CM on Information Barrister MuhammadAli Saif (3rd from right) and Minister for Religious Affaris Sahibzada Muhammad Adnan Qadri (4th from left) and others hold copies of latest Freedom Network special report on freedom of expression and safety of journalists in merged tribal districts of Khyber Pakhtunkwa on Wednesday. The report sheds light on state of freedom of expression and safety of journalists five years after erstwhile Federally Administered Tribal Areas were merged into the province – a political move to streamline former tribal belt along border with Afghanistan to combat militancy. Barrister Saif told a conference that KP government would table bill on protection of journalists to combat impunity for crimes against journalists in the province. Journalist Fareedullah (extreme L), media development expert Adnan Rehmat (2nd from L), Khyber Union of Journalists president Nasir Hussain (third from L), Peshawar Press Club president Arshad Aziz Malik (fourth from right) and Freedom Network Executive Director Iqbal Khattak (extreme R) are also seen in this group photo.

Clicl below link to download full PDF version of report:

PDF Version – Newstribes Of The NorthWest

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