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Shiraz Hasnat has been a journalist for over 22 years. Back in 2016, he had to leave his lucrative job as a prime-time TV anchor on Dawn TV after attempts at his alleged abduction and when he allegedly found a bullet in his office.
"When the news of the death of Arshad Sharif, an old friend and a former colleague came, my wife told me that she was glad I was no longer an anchor on TV," he says.
The fear stems from decades of media curbs, censorship, and a lack of trust that the journalists suffer from where many are looked at as biased towards a political party or the all-powerful ‘establishment.’
Sharif’s death has rekindled a number of questions about press freedom in Pakistan, a country ranked 157th in the Reporters without Border's press freedom index of 2022, a drop of 12 places since 2021. The report called Pakistan “one of the world’s deadliest countries for journalists,” with murders and abductions of journalists.
The report categorically blames Pakistan’s powerful Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) – an intelligence agency offshoot – to be responsible for media censorship and detention of journalists.
While Imran Khan has come out in favour of press freedom and has been using the death of Sharif as a political tool against the army establishment in his political rallies, he had previously used terms like lifafa to describe other journalists and it was during this term as the prime minister when some of them were attacked and abducted.
Abbas, who has spent over 40 years in journalism, tells The Quint that Sharif’s death is the first of its kind where a journalist was killed outside the country. “Now that it is established that he wasn’t killed as a result of mistaken identity but was targeted, the journalist community is concerned and has demanded a thorough investigation,” he adds.
The senior journalist describes Sharif as someone considered to be close to Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI). “One can disagree with the content of his shows but he did good homework in all of them.”
Abbas believes that Sharif was threatened with charges of sedition and that is why he probably left Pakistan.
These cases are just a few methods employed to curb criticism in Pakistan where several senior journalists have accused that they have had abduction and assassination attempts.
Shiraz Hasnat, the current finance secretary of the Lahore Press Club, used to host a show on Dawn TV in 2015 called Exposed. “It was a three-days-a-week primetime show which I left due to my security and due to threats," he says.
Pakistan has suffered such impacts before and has witnessed several instances of media curb since the Independence in 1947. The strongest of these was during the regime of military dictator General Zia Ul Haq in the 1970s and the 1980s, when newspapers were stiffly censored and strictly controlled.
In 1979, two newspapers in Karachi – the Daily Musawat and the Daily Sadaqat – were banned by Zia government which in December 1980 would issue Martial Law Regulation No. 49, banning any publication deemed to be against the integrity and security of Pakistan.
While journalists regularly face threats in Pakistan, Hasnat believes that the current situation is not as bad as it was during Zia's time. “There are still restrictions but there are far more opportunities for journalists through social media.”
Another journalist who suffered physical and mental harm is the senior investigative reporter with Fact Focus, Ahmad Noorani who now resides in the US after leaving Pakistan in March 2020. He opines that the absence of any sort of democratic base in the country added to the woes of journalists.
Many, he agrees, have had to leave the country to pursue the profession.
“I am also one of them who had to leave Pakistan out of economic reasons as my job prospects got limited and the mental harassment I suffered,” he says.
In 2017, Noorani was allegedly attacked by unidentified assailants where he "was hit with iron rods.”
In Pakistan, there is a clear binary that exists in the minds of people about journalism. If someone writes a critical story against Imran Khan, they are automatically presumed to be pro-Army or pro-establishment.
Political analyst and journalist Murtaza Dar argues that while the assassination of Sharif is condemnable and will perpetuate fear for journalists in Pakistan, “no country in the world has media which is 100% free."
"Freedom of the press is a customised freedom and there are spaces where the media is allowed to move. Journalists need to learn the way to walk through those spaces,” he opines.
Abbas believes that Pakistani journalists “have a strong resolve and are resilient.”
This was reiterated by Noorani, who is of the view that despite the restrictions over the decades, media has won freedom through its own spirit.
(Ibrar is a freelance journalist and analyst currently based in the UK. He is an alumnus of SOAS University of London where he studied South Asian Area Studies focusing on democracy, authoritarianism and culture of South Asia and Afghanistan-Pakistan geopolitics.)
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