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It
started with pulling the plug on access to information for one
man and snowballed into an attack on the press itself. Soon
after his meeting with President Musharraf at the Army House,
Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry was driven home, although he
intended to drive to the Supreme Court. Driving in a car sans
the official flag, he entered a home devoid of newspapers and
the Internet. According to Air Marshal (Retd.) Asghar Khan,
“The Chief Justice’s telephone lines, TV and Internet
had been disconnected, his personal mobile phone blocked and
newspaper delivery stopped.”
As
the story unfolded, a sense of déjà vu prevailed.
For most Pakistanis, this was a grim reminder of the Zia era.
Of all the sentries posted by the constitution of a free country
to stand guard over its freedoms, the most vigilant is the media.
An outrageous attempt to gag the media was witnessed by Pakistani
citizens on live television during the attack.
About
two dozen storm troopers from the Punjab police were unleashed
to attack and ransack the offices of Geo TV on March 16, in
an effort to stop the channel from airing live pictures of police
brutality against protesting lawyers. They smashed the windows
of the office, leaving rooms covered in a layer of broken glass.
Since
the attack, apologies have been made and official circles have
belatedly “condemned the attack.” Federal Minister
for Railways and former Information Minister Shaikh Rashid said
while talking to Geo, “Our media is more advanced than
we are. Our people are not ready to view such live footage.”
The
chief commissioner police, Islamabad, notified a nine-member
Joint Investigation Team (JIT) headed by SP Headquarters Taimur
Ali Khan, under section 19 of the Anti-Terrorism Act (AAT) to
investigate the attack.
The
JIT comprises of Dr Muhammad Azam Khan (SP Investigation, Rawalpindi),
Muhammad Ali (SP-CID, Islamabad), Muhammad Nawaz (ISI), Aamir
Mujahid Khan (Intelligence Bureau, Islamabad), Jahanzaib Zahoor
Awan (Military Intelligence, Islamabad), Rana Akbar Hayat (SDM/AC,
Saddar), Kamran Adil (ASP City, Islamabad) and Shahzad Zaffar
(Inspector FIA, Islamabad).
Rana Akbar Hayat is a judicial officer. According to Section
19 of the ATA, members of the JIT should belong to investigation
and intelligence agencies and not be persons holding judicial
or administrative office.
Section
19 clearly states, “All offences under this Ordinance
except the offences in respect of which the investigation has
already been completed and final report under Section 173 of
the Code submitted in the Court shall be investigated by a Joint
Investigation Team, which shall comprise a police officer not
below the rank of an inspector and an officer of any investigation
agency, including an intelligence agency, whom the federal government,
or as the case may be, the provincial government, may nominate
for the purpose. The Joint Investigation Team shall complete
the investigation in respect of a case triable by an Anti-Terrorism
Court within seven working days and forward directly to the
Anti-Terrorism Court, a report under Section 173 of the Code.”
Consequently,
Rana Akbar Hayat cannot be a member of the JIT. Therefore, the
investigation conducted by the JIT will be illegal and the report
can be challenged in a court of law.
The
media faces further restrictions on its reporting. The regulatory
authority, Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority (PEMRA),
had banned the show Aaj Kamran Khan Kay Sath only to lift the
ban a week later. Aaj TV has also had their broadcasts suspended
in recent days due to its coverage of the judicial crisis.
There have been three instances of press intimidation with reference
to the current crisis. While the case of Geo TV is well known,
it is not so well known that ARY and Aaj TV were subjected to
verbal intimidation by PEMRA. Both channels showed live coverage
of the lawyers’ protest in Lahore, with the PPPP’s
Latif Khosa being beaten by the police and bleeding from the
head. These images were caught on camera live by both stations
and broadcast. PEMRA verbally asked the management of these
channels to pull the images off the air. However, both channels
repeated them with the result that PEMRA suspended the channels’
transmission.
The second blow was delivered in writing to Geo by PEMRA, declaring
that the show Aaj Kamran Khan Kay Sath be pulled off as it was
in “contempt of court commenting on an issue that is sub
judice.” The episode that prompted the action was a discussion
of the judicial crisis with former law ministers and constitutional
and legal experts.
Media
analyst and country director of Internews, Adnan Rehmat, informs,
“The only legal advisory that the media got was from the
Supreme Judicial Council, who declared that the media would
not be allowed to broadcast the proceedings of the case. Any
information about the proceedings of the case will be restricted
to the official press release. There is no bar, legally speaking,
on discussing the broader spectrum in the context of Pakistan.”
On
the Aaj Kamran Khan Kay Sath show, there was a candid discussion
among former law ministers and constitutional experts over the
role of various pillars and departments of the state, including
the army. “There is nothing sub judice about this, and
under Article 19 of the constitution, the media is free to report
on issues of public concern and interest,” remarked Adnan.
It is important to point out that after Aaj Kamran Khan Kay
Sath went on air, readers also saw a press release issued by
the Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR) eulogising the great
service that the Pakistan Army had rendered to the nation over
the years and declaring that the army should not be criticised.
The
third instance of media intimidation from PEMRA came when two
days after the Geo attack, ace Aaj TV anchor Talat Hussain got
together prominent anchors of all stations to discuss the issue
of media freedom in the country. The anchors were quite candid
about the press advice that they’ve received over the
years. The anchors declared that they have been specifically
instructed “not to discuss the army and its role at all.”
Geo’s Hamid Mir declared that he has been advised “to
preferably gloss over the CJ issue or tone it down, otherwise
advertisements of the Jang group would be cut.” Hamid
Mir declared during the show that if he did not get justice,
he would leave a country where the Chief Justice doesn’t
get justice and would fight his case from outside the country.
After the show, another verbal directive from PEMRA was issued
to Aaj TV. The directives are mostly verbal because, according
to Adnan Rehmat, “The government does not leave a paper
trail.”
A
petition was also admitted in the Lahore High Court by an individual
requesting that “until this judicial crisis is over, all
private TV and radio channels be stopped.” PEMRA is also
one of the plaintiffs in this petition.
PEMRA
is a strange regulatory body. According to Adnan Rehmat, “It
focuses on Don’ts more than it focuses on Dos. This is
not surprising as it is headed by a retired police officer who
has spent all his life on Don’ts rather than Dos.”
Unlike other regulatory bodies in the country, PEMRA only regulates
the private sector. It has a board of 13 members, with no representation
of the private television or radio sector. According to Adnan
Rehmat, “There is a dichotomy. The president can come
on air and talk about the chief justice, but when the same TV
channel, on the same show, with the same anchor conducts a discussion
on broad legal and political contours of the issue, PEMRA regards
that as sub judice.”
On
the subject of media freedom that the present government declares
it has ‘given’ to the media, I.A. Rehman, director
Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, maintains, “There
is freedom of speech, but no freedom to hear and understand.”
The
government claims that it has “allowed” a lot of
channels and FM radio stations to function, but this is not
proof enough that it is comfortable with freedom of expression.
For the general public, the attack on Geo was a glaring example
of press intimidation. However, for members of the media, the
only thing new about this was that the attack on press freedom
was caught on camera; usually it happens behind closed doors.
The present government’s claims of media freedom are deceptive.
The only ‘permission’ that the current regime has
given is to allow the setting up of private channels. But even
if it had not, there are multiple sources of independent information
that citizens can access. Even a citizen living in a heavily
censored and regulated society, such as China, where there are
30,000 Internet police and where Google’s keywords are
blocked, can get the information he seeks.
In the present communication age, if a television station is
blocked, there is radio. If radio is blocked, there is the Internet.
If one site is blocked, another one opens. If the Internet goes
down, there are short messaging services. These opportunities
allowed private radio stations, like Islamabad-based Power 99,
to broadcast live protests in Islamabad when Chief Justice Iftikhar
Chaudhry was being brought to the court, through a radio recorder
mobile phone.
This opportunity allows even self-exiled Senators like Balochistan’s
Sanaullah Baloch to maintain websites giving out factual information
on the Balochistan situation after they and their families were
hounded out and forced to live in exile. It allows Pakistani
citizens to voice their opinion on blogs and get the word out.
It allows media and other citizens to connect to a global audience
and generate international pressure. It was no coincidence that
Hamid Mir switched to the English language while describing
the events that took place at the Geo office as he stood outside
it. Governments would do well to remember this before they attempt
to silence the media.
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