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Saturday, March 17, 2007

IPI World Press Freedom Monthly Review: November to Mid-December

IPI World Press Freedom Monthly Review:
November to Mid-December


On 1 November, unidentified assailants murdered Mohammad Ismail,
a bureau chief at the Pakistan Press Institute (PPI), in PAKISTAN’S
capital, Islamabad. Ismail was last seen leaving his house for a walk.
He was later found dead after having been beaten about the head with
a blunt instrument.

In the UNITED STATES, a press release issued on 2 November by
Freedom House called on the Millennium Challenge Corporation
(MCC), which distributes U.S. congressional aid, to ensure that countries
receiving development funding should be held to high ethical standards.
The organisation called on the MCC to refuse to fund countries that failed
to meet “reasonable” standards on political and civil rights and invited the
organisation to follow-up on countries that were failing to meet promised
benchmarks. In June this year, the International Press Institute praised
the MCC for its suspension of THE GAMBIA from the programme due to
its poor record on press freedom and human rights in general.
In POLAND, on 3 November, the Polish constitutional court upheld
Article 212 of the Criminal Code, which makes it an offence, punishable
by a maximum of one year in prison, to defame or publicly humiliate someone.
Critics of the decision said that the Polish constitutional court was putting
personal dignity ahead of the right to free expression.
On the same day, in IRAQ, Ahmed Al Rashid, one of TV station Al Sharkiya’s journalists, was gunned down in his car as he was leaving the station. Two days
later, police officers entered the television station and threatened to close it
down if it continued to broadcast programmes about the trial of former Iraqi
leader, Saddam Hussein. There were also calls for the release of Associated
Press photographer, Bilal Hussein, who has been detained for over six months
in Iraq accused of being a security threat. So far, the U.S. forces have failed to
offer any evidence justifying the journalist’s detention.
A legal review of proposed amendments to the SINGAPORE Penal Code, a
law already believed to seriously infringe freedom of expression, highlighted
further risks to press freedom. According to the report produced by the
Southeast Asian Press Alliance (SEAPA), the government intends to introduce
fresh amendments to the law that cover the Internet and electronic media. Furthermore, it is proposed that section 298 is expanded to cover the “wounding
of racial feelings.”
In a decision of 9 November, in RUSSIA, the Supreme Court overturned the
acquittal of two suspects in the assassination of Forbes Russia editor, Paul
Klebnikov, in 2004. The decision of the court follows a jury verdict that found
Kazbek Dukuzov and Musa Vakhayev innocent of Klebnikov’s murder. The
trial was held in camera and the jurors were forbidden to speak about the case
by an order of the court
On 10 November, in MEXICO, Misael Tamayo Hernández, the editor of El
Despertar de la Costa
, was found murdered in his hotel room in Ixtapa
Zihuatanejo in Guerrero state. Hernández was found naked with his hands tied
behind his back by a belt. There were also punctures wounds in his right arm indicating he might have been poisoned.
Unidentified gunmen killed Muhammad al-Ban, a reporter and cameraman for
the privately owned Al-Sharqiya TV, on 13 November. He was murdered when leaving his home in the town of Mosul in IRAQ. The gunmen fired from a fixed
position on the back of a pickup truck.
There were reports in mid-November that three journalists had died in the
Eiraeiro detention centre in the northeastern desert of ERITREA. All of the
journalists had been arrested in a brutal roundup of the private media in
September 2001. The reports led to calls from international press freedom organisations for the Eritrean government to confirm the reports.
Another three journalists were reported killed in IRAQ. Fadia Mohammed Ali,
who worked for newspaper Al Masar, was killed, together with her driver, while travelling to work in Mosul on 15 November. Journalist Qussai Abass of the
newspaper Tariq Al Shaab was killed with his driver in a similar attack on the
way to the office on 2 November. Another journalist, Luma Mohammad Reyad,
who worked for the US-funded Al Dustoor newspaper, was killed on 17 November.
In the ongoing battle over attempts to force blogger Josh Wolf to provide
authorities in the UNITED STATES with video footage of a July 2005
demonstration, the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in a November decision
refused to rehear the case. Wolf has been in prison since 18 September.
On 16 November, in MEXICO, José Manuel Nava Sánchez was found stabbed
to death in his home in Mexico City. Sánchez was a former director of the daily Excélsior and columnist for the national daily El Sol de México. According to
witnesses at the murder scene, there was no evidence of a robbery. Prior to
his death, he had published a story alleging corruption among local officials.
On 21 November,
Roberto Marcos García, a reporter for the Veracruz-based bi-monthly publication Testimonio and a local correspondent for the Mexico
City weekly Alarma, was gunned down by armed attackers near the town of
La Matoza while travelling from Veracruz to Alvarado. García, who reported
on violent crime and drug trafficking in Veracruz, had recently received threats.
In a disappointing decision in late November, the
African Commission for Human and Peoples’ Rights (ACHPR), at its session in
Banjul, The Gambia, deferred to its next session a Communication filed by the Independent Journalists Association of Zimbabwe (IJAZ), Zimbabwe Lawyers
for Human Rights (ZLHR) and the Media Institute of Southern Africa (MISA-Zimbabwe). The Communication challenges the legality of
ZIMBABWE’S
Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act
(AIPPA). The ACHPR’s decision followed a request from the Zimbabwean
government.
In a 4 April 2006 protest, IPI said it was disappointed at the slow progress
made by the African Union (AU) in criticising Zimbabwe's record on human
rights. The press release said, “[I]t is essential that the AU places the importance
of human rights and freedom of the press above what appears to be a deep-
seated reluctance to criticise African leaders.”
On 26 November, in IRAQ, Fadhila Abdelkarim, an administrative staff member
of the TV station Nainawa, was killed in Mosul. The journalist was shot dead by gunmen outside her front door. Raad Jaafar Hamadi, a journalist with Al Sabah,
was killed on 22 November in Baghdad when gunmen fired on his car.
In MEXICO, on 30 November, the body of missing journalist
Adolfo Sánchez Guzmán was found in Mendoza, Veracruz. Guzmán, who worked for Mexican news website, Orizaba en Vivo, had been shot twice in the head. His body also bore evidence of stab wounds. On 4 December, police announced that they were holding two suspects in the murder.
On 4 December, IPI welcomed the acquittal of three journalists who had been
tried by the Danish courts for publishing classified intelligence reports under DENMARK’S criminal code. Commenting on the acquittal, IPI Director Johann P. Fritz said, "…The legal decision is an important victory in Denmark for the media's right to investigate the claims of government."
The case goes back to 2004 when Michael Bjerre and Jesper Larsen, reporters
for the daily newspaper Berlingske Tidende, were charged with "publishing information illegally obtained by a third party.” On 13 November 2006, Niels
Lunde, editor-in-chief of Berlingske Tidende, as well as the two reporters, went
on trial in Copenhagen.
The charges stemmed from a series of articles published in Berlingske Tidende in
2004 that contained information passed anonymously to Bjerre and Larsen by military intelligence officer Frank Grevil showing that there was no credible
evidence that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction before the March 2003 invasion of Iraq.
In another murder of a journalist in IRAQ, on 4 December,
Nabil Ibrahim Al-Dulaimi, a journalist with the Baghdad-based news radio station Radio Dijla, was murdered by gunmen in Baghdad.
On 5 December, FIJI suffered its fourth coup in twenty years. The declaration
of the coup by Commodore Frank Bainimarama led to a number of press freedom violations particularly surrounding the private Fiji Daily Post. On 5 December, IPI protested that the Fiji Daily Post was forced to halt operations and evacuate their premises for a period of 24 hours following these threats. In another press release
on 14 December, IPI crticised the ongoing intimidation and censorship and the alarming decision to deport the Post’s editor-in-chief, Robert Wolfgramm
On 8 December, in the PHILIPPINES, Ponciano Grande, who had worked for
The Recorder and The Nueva Ecija Times, was killed when he was shot five times
at close range. Grande’s wife was close by when he was murdered. The perpetrators appeared to be teenagers.

IFJ–PFUJ Mission for Press Freedom and Journalist Safety in Pakistan

IFJ–PFUJ Mission for Press Freedom and Journalist Safety in Pakistan

Printer Friendly Version

23/02/2007

A coalition of international and local press freedom and media groups, led by the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) and its affiliate in Pakistan, the Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists (PFUJ), is conducting an urgent mission to Pakistan, in response to the deteriorating press freedom situation and worsening safety environment.

The IFJ-PFUJ Mission for Press Freedom and Journalist Safety will be in Pakistan from February 21 to February 25, 2007.

Members of the mission spent February 22 in Lahore meeting with local journalists, office-bearers of the Lahore Press Club, Punjab Union of Journalists, and meeting with the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP), including HRCP director I.A.Rehman and HRCP chairperson Asma Jehangir, who is also United Nations Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion or Belief of the Commission on Human Rights.

The mission traveled to Peshawar and will travel to Islamabad tomorrow to meet with journalists and their family members, and will seek to meet with government representatives, police and the military.

The mission members met with the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) police chief this morning in Peshawar, and will be meeting with the NWFP information minister later today, February 23.

The will also meet in Peshawar on February 23 with NWFP senior editors and journalists who have been under attack in NWFP.

The mission is also seeking a meeting with Pakistan’s Prime Minister to discuss the mission’s findings and push for action to be taken by the government.

Members of the mission include Christopher Warren, president of the IFJ, who is joining the mission in Islamabad; Bharat Bushan, editor of The Telegraph in Delhi; Chris Morley, president of the National Union of Journalists, UK and Ireland; Iqbal Khattak, bureau chief of The Daily Times and Pakistan’s representative to Reporters Sans Frontiers; Sunanda Deshapriya of the Free Media Movement in Sri Lanka; and Pervez Shoukat, president of PFUJ.

The mission has been arranged in response to continued media oppression and increasing numbers of attacks on journalists and their families. In the past eight months, four journalists, as well as two child brothers of media workers, have been murdered.

“We need to persuade the government of Pakistan to act to stop these attacks on journalists and press freedom; we will appeal directly to government officials to do more to protect journalists and ensure a free and safe media environment,” IFJ president Christopher Warren said.

A roundtable conference of the mission members, local journalists (including those that have suffered from attacks and press freedom abuses), editors, rights activists, lawyers and politicians will take place in Islamabad on February 24, and the mission will conclude with a press conference in Islamabad on February 25.

Additional information on the issues the mission will address in Pakistan can be found in the capsule report attached.

Capsule Report – Pakistan

Journalists murdered
On November 1, 2006, Mohammad Ismail, a senior journalist and bureau chief of Pakistan Press International (PPI), was brutally murdered when attacked by unknown assailants in Islamabad.

Maqbool Hussain Sail, a correspondent with the news agency On-Line, died after being shot by unidentified attackers on September 15, 2006. Sail was reportedly on his way to the house of the local leader of the opposition party, the Pakistan People Party, when he was shot.

Hayatullah Khan was found murdered on June 16, 2006, six months after his abduction. He was allegedly abducted near the tribal area of North Waziristan, after reporting on an explosion that killed senior Al Qaeda member, Maza Rabia.

Munir Ahmed Sangi, a cameraman for the Sindhi-language Kawaish Television Network (KTN) was shot on May 29, 2006. Sangi had been covering a story on a gunfight between members of the Unar and Abro tribes in the town of Larkana, in Pakistan’s Sindh district when he was shot.

Targeting of family members
The IFJ reported the murder of the child brother of slain journalist Hayatullah Khan on September 26, 2006. Bashir Khan’s murder was allegedly a message to his family, who had been active in trying to expose Hayatullah Khan’s killers.

On August 31, 2006, the IFJ reported the murder of BBC correspondent Dilawar Wazir’s teenage brother in South Waziristan, a tribal-ruled region along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border. According to the PFUJ, the murder of 16-year-old Taimur Khan may have been a message to Dilawar who had been under threat for his reporting for the past two years.

Kidnappings and torture
Suhail Qalandar, a news editor with the Daily Express in Peshawar, disappeared on January 2, 2007. Local reports suggest he may have been targeted for political reasons. Demonstrations and rallies were held across Pakistan on February 19, 2007, in protest of his kidnapping, as well as of the government’s lax response. Qalandar was released two-days later on February 21, after the protest rallies were held on the PFUJ call.

Dilawar Khan Wazir, a BBC Urdu-language reporter and a journalist for the daily publication Dawn, was reported missing on November 20, 2006 and was released one day later. Wazir, who could not identify his abductors, was blindfolded, harassed, physically attacked and questioned about his sources during the ordeal. Wazir’s abduction comes after a string of recent attacks and threats targeting Wazir, his family and his colleagues.

Kawish journalist Mehruddin Marri, who was abducted in Thatta on June 27, 2006, was released on October 24 after four months of torture. He was interrogated, beaten and suffered electric shocks and other forms of torture, in an attempt to make him confess ties with the Baluch nationalist movement.

Saeed Sarbazi, joint secretary of the Karachi Press Club, senior sub-editor of daily Business Recorder and a member of the All Pakistan Newspapers Employees Confederation’s National Executive Committee, was abducted and tortured on September 20, 2006. He was released on September 22.

On June 26, 2006 two missing journalists were officially arrested in Pakistan and released on bail after their abduction earlier in the year. Mukesh Rupeta, a Geo News correspondent, and Sanjay Kumar, a freelance cameraman, reportedly disappeared on March 6. According to a spokesperson from Geo News, Pakistani authorities reported that the two were detained for videoing the Jacobabad air-base in Sindh. There were concerns for the poor health of both journalists, raising serious questions about their treatment.

Attacks, threats and abuse
Reports on December 15, 2006 suggested that a new press regulatory body that may be established in Pakistan is a replication of an infamous “black law” dating back to the 1960s. According to the PFUJ, a report appeared in a leading Urdu language daily newspaper stating the government was about to instate a new body called the Press and Publication Regulatory Authority (PAPRA). The PAPRA was likely to be a mirror of the Press and Publication Ordinance from the 1960s, tagged a “black law”.

On November 10, 2006 several journalists were detained and intimidated, in what appeared to be a deliberate attempt to block access to information and silence journalists. Five journalists - Masood Khan, Anwar Hakim, Haseen Ahmed, Zafarullah and Moammad Ibrahim, were harassed and detained by officials when travelling to the tribal region of Bajour to investigate the killing of 83 people on October 30.

On September 17, 2006 it was reported that police attacked journalists at a public meeting of a religious organisation in Lahore. According to the PFUJ, Wadood Mushtaq, from ARYONE World, received serious wounds on his face and jaw, ATV's Malik Zahid endured internal injuries and Mohannad Nazi received a fractured arm.

The senior journalist and union leader Cr. Shamsi was brutally attacked by the security guards of the Federal Minister for Labour in Islamabad on September 13, 2006, after Shamsi demanded the implementation of the Seventh Wage Award.

The Peshawar Press Club was attacked by activists of the Pakistan Muslim League on June 29, 2006, injuring newsmen and staff members of the club. Additionally, three journalists, including Khalil Afredi of the Daily Khabrian, Sudhi Afredi of the Daily Frontier Post and Abu Zar Afredi of the Daily Express were detained without charge for 24 hours for interviewing wanted head cleric of Lashkar-e-Islami, Mangal Afredi. Reports also revealed the group Lashkar-e-Islami threatened Qazi Nasrullah of the Daily Mashriq and Qazi Rauf of the Daily Express for reporting in favour of government policies.

On June 14, 2006 about 50 individuals reportedly attacked six media workers at the Thari Mirwah Press Club, punching, kicking and beating the press with sticks. The attack was allegedly in response to a story on contractors’ use of unsatisfactory material in the construction of irrigation watercourses.

Eight media workers were injured in a bomb attack while covering a religious gathering to celebrate the anniversary of the birth of the Prophet Mohammad in Karachi on April 11, 2006. The attack killed 57 people and seriously injured close to 100 others.

On December 23, 2005, a group of armed men threw a petrol bomb into the offices of the Sukkur edition of the Sindhi-language daily newspaper Khabroon. The assailants are believed to be Sindhi nationalists. Prior to the attack, the entire staff of Khabroon had resigned over what they termed the “misuse” of public money by the Federal Ministry of Information who had issued advertisements in favour of the controversial Kalabagh Dam.

Journalists’ economic conditions
On January 8, 2007 the IFJ renewed calls for implementation of the Seventh Wage Award in Pakistan and pressed the government to address the working conditions that journalists face.

On September 15 2006, Protest Sit-Ins for wage justice for Pakistani journalists were hosted by the PFUJ. The protests took place outside the Governor's House in Lahore, Karachi, Peshawar and Quetta. The present economic situation for media workers in Pakistan continues to deteriorate, with little job stability or support from employers, coupled with low wages.

Pakistan newspaper owners are bound to pay the wages set out by the Seventh Wage Board decision, which handed down minimum job conditions and wages on October 8, 2001 and was back-dated to 2000. However, these wages are still not being paid, and the government of Pakistan has done nothing to improve the economic conditions of journalists.

On October 4, 2005, journalists around the world united in a global day of action to protest the continued exploitation of Pakistani journalists by newspaper employers that has seen thousands of journalists suffer. The IFJ launched the global day of action on the anniversary of the Seventh Wage Award decision. Many Pakistani journalists work two or even three jobs to make ends meet and others have to work under daily wages, without the security of a permanent position or offer of appointment.

October 8, 2005 – South Asia Earthquake
The South Asia earthquake killed more than 54,000 people, mostly in Pakistani-controlled areas of the disputed Kashmir region. Approximately 50 journalists based in Balakot, Muzzafarabad, Karachi and Islamabad were identified as killed, missing, injured or directly affected by the earthquake, through the loss of family members, their homes or in many cases both. Sardar Hanif of daily Jang, Abdul Hafeez, the editor of Juraat, and Javed Iqbal Butt, a photographer for daily Jinnah all lost their lives as a result of the earthquake. A further five journalists were reported missing and over twenty journalists sustained injuries.

For further information contact IFJ Asia-Pacific on +61 2 9333 0919

The IFJ represents over 500,000 journalists in more than 115 countries


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Sunday, March 04, 2007

Violence against Media in Pakistan : October 2006 Report






Violence against Media in Pakistan :
October 2006 Report


PRESS RELEASE




A senior journalist was murdered in mysterious circumstances
in the federal capital whereas 11 other incidents of attacks against
media were reported in the national press in October 2006, raising
the total number of attacks on press in 2006 to 100.
Monthly report on press freedom in Pakistan by Intermedia, an
NGO working to develop and strengthen media in Pakistan, says
that veteran journalist and Bureau Chief of PPI news agency,
Muhammad Ismail, was found dead in woods near the Super Market.
Media reports said that he was killed on October 31 night when
he went out for a routine evening walk. Ismail is the fourth journalist
to be killed this year. Earlier three journalists were murdered this year
– Muneer Ahmed Sangi of daily Kawish was killed on May 29 in Larkana,
Hayatullah Khan of The Nation was killed June 16 in North Waziristan
and Maqbool Hussain Siyal of Online news agency killed on September
14, 2006 .
In other incidents four journalists were robbed and tortured, two were
harassed by police and administration officials. There were three incidents
of attacks on media property whereas in two separate incidents journalists
were forcefully bared from performing their duties.

MONTH WISE ATTACKS ON MEDIA

January - Oct 2006

MONTHS

JAN

FEB

MAR

APR

MAY

JUN

JULY AUG SEPT OCT

No of Attacks

6

7

11

6

5

13

10

15

15 12

On October 30 Political Administration of Bajaur Agency stopped journalists
from visiting the area where at least 83 people were killed in an air strike on
a religious school. Senior journalists who were not allowed to visit the area
included Rahimullah Yusufzai of The News, Haroon Rashid of the BBC
Urdu Service, Mehmood Jan Babar of AVT Khyber TV and several others.
On the same day in Islamabad government authorities didn't allow beat
reporters to cover the engagements of the visiting royal couple.

During the month, three incidents of attack on media property were
also reported in the press. In first incident, office of a Media NGO
‘Press for Peace' Muzaffarabad was attacked by some people. The office
furniture was ransacked and staff was injured during the attack. In second
incident copies of English daily the Dawn were set on fire in front of the
Hyderabad Press Club by some people who had snatched them from
news-stands and hawkers in Qasimabad Taluka and some other areas
of the city on October 22.

In the third incident officials of the Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory
Authority (PEMRA) NWFP region on October 23 rd raided several cable
operators in Peshawar and seized their equipment for relaying proscribed
channels.

In October two journalists threatened by police and administration officials.
In first incident, President Press Club Kot Digi, Syed Imam Ali Shah Bukhari,
was threatened of “dire consequences” by Talika Nazim Kot Digi Munawar Ali
Wasan for not vacating the press club building.

The other incident of harassment was reported in Rawalpindi where a
journalist Chaudhry Muhammad Iqbal was harassed and threatened by
Police ASI Muhammad Iqbal for reporting news of lawlessness in the areas.

There were four incidents in which journalists were robbed. Kazim Raza,
an employee of English daily the Dawn was on his way home when armed
men stopped him and asked him to handover his motorcycle, The Star Karachi reported on October 5 2006 .

On October 10, Station Director, Radio Pakistan Kohat, Laiq Zada was
deprived of cash and valuables, a report in Daily Aaj Peshawar said.
Two bandits snatched a mobile phone and cash from Shoaib Ahmed
Ansari, sub-editor Pakistan Press International (PPI) staffer at
Tarachand Road , Karachi , The Nation reported.

Muhammad Nawaz Tahir, senior vice president of Pakistan
Federal Union of Journalists, was covering a protest event in front
of Lahore Press Club when his motorcycle was impounded by policemen,
Daily Times reported.

Area

Murder

Injured/
Tortured

Detained/
Kidnapped

Harassment/
Threats

Media banned

Attack on Media Property

Total

Punjab

-

1

-

1

-

-

2

Sindh

-

2

-

1

-

1

4

NWFP

-

1

-

-

-

1

2

Balochistan

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Islamabad

1

-

-

-

1

-

2

Tribal Areas

-

-

-

-

1

-

1

AJ&K

-

-

-

-

-

1

1

Total

1

4

-

2

2

3

12


Follow up to incidents in September

Chief Justice of Pakistan , Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry, declared
The News crime correspondent Shakeel Anjum innocent after a top-level
police inquiry found him not guilty of triple murder on October 16 2006 .

In Lahore three journalists—Wadood Mushtaq (ARY), cameraman
Nazir Awan (ARY) and Zahid Malik (AVT Khyber) were tortured by
Police DSP Mukhtar Shah. Later on the victims withdrew the complaint
after accepting an apology from the accused in Lahore Press Club.

Saeed Sarbazi of Business Recorder who was arrested by intelligence agencies
was released after a week and he confirmed his detention by intelligence
agencies without any warrant or case registered against him.

Rafiq Aziz, editor of a local daily ‘Chamag' from Turbat (Balochistan),
Abdul Sattar Khan from Chiniot (Punjab) were arrested by Police in
September. The two journalists were granted bail by a local court.

Maqbool Hussain Siyal, bureau chief of Online News Agency, was shot
dead on September 14 in DI Khan. Till November 1 st 2006 , Police failed
to find out any clue of the case. Muhammad Rehan, Secretary General,
DIK Union of Journalists told the Intermedia that police is giving it a
color of religious sectarianism because the late journalist Maqbool Siyal
was belongs to Shia religion. Rehan rejected the police claim and said the
murder of Maqbool Siyal was an incident of terrorism. Rehan claimed that
the government announced compensation of 0.2 million for the grieved
family of Maqbool Hussain has not been materialized.

ENDS










Journalist stage protest against killing, kidnaping and baton-charge of journalists.

Journalists stage six-hour protest against baton-charge



ISLAMABAD: The journalists of Rawalpindi and Islamabad staged a six-hour sit-in in front of the Press Information Department here on Thursday to press the government to punish the police officer who ordered a baton-charge on reporters and photographers covering a suicide attack outside a five star hotel. During the protest, the journalists shouted slogans against the government, police and the capital administration.

The protesting journalists passed three resolution, demanding the suspension of the additional SP, recovery of Sohial Kalandar, the editor of Daily Express Peshawar who has been kidnapped, and arrest of those involved in the murder of senior journalist Malik Muhammad Ismail.

Afzal Butt, secretary of the Rawalpindi-Islamabad Press Club, demanded the government immediately suspend the additional SP.
Source: Daily Times

Date:2/2/2007

Letter to the Editor "Journalist Killed" Published in Daily Dawn on Sunday November 26, 2006.

Journalist killed


WHEN I read the news item ‘Journalist found brutally murdered’ (Dawn, Nov 2) I was shocked that what is happening in Pakistan. Yet another brave journalist is murdered for writing and speaking boldly. Why is there no security for people who are speaking and writing the truth?

Malik Mohammad Ismail was one of the big names in Pakistan journalism and his murderers have not been traced or caught so far. His was the 12th murder in Islamabad in a month and criminals involved in none of the cases have been traced yet. If the killing of journalists keeps rising like this, no writer will dare speak against the wrong happenings in society.

ABEER KHAN
West Palm Beach, USA