Pakistan -Three Journalists Slain In One Week
Media release: Pakistan
Pakistan -Three Journalists Slain In One Week
March 4, 2013
The International Federation of Journalists is appalled at the death of three Pakistani journalists in the space of a week and has called on authorities to thoroughly investigate the cases to ensure the perpetrators are brought to justice.
On March 1, Mehmood Ahmed Afridi, a correspondent for the newspaper Intikhab, was killed by gunmen travelling by motorcycle in Kalat, in the southwestern province of Balochistan. Afridi, 56, had worked as a journalist since 1995 and was president of the Kalat press club. Colleagues said Afridi had been waiting outside a public telephone booth when two men on a motorcycle stopped and opened fire - he was shot four times.
On 27 February in Miranshah, North Waziristan, in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), journalist Malik Mumtaz Khan, was on his way to his home when he was gunned down by armed men waiting in a vehicle with tinted windows of the kind widely used by militants. Khan had been a journalist for 15 years and had worked for TV news channel GEO and the Jang newspaper group. He had also recently been elected president of the Miranshah press club.
On February
25 Khushnood Ali Shaikh, the chief reporter of the
state-controlled Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) wire
agency was killed in Karachi, the capital of Sindh province
when he was struck in a hit-and-run incident with a car.
Shaikh had been receiving threatening calls for some time
that warned his child would be abducted and murdered if he
did not pay Rs. 50,000 in extortion. Shaikh had informed his
union, his employer and the police of the threats. He
relocated to Islamabad and thought that the threats had gone
away. Returning to Karachi, the threats resumed. It’s
believed his death was no accident and that he was
deliberately targeted.
“Increasingly, governments
around the world are allowing killers to get away with
murder because the targeted killing of journalists are not
properly investigated,” the IFJ said.
“Authorities cannot allow a culture of impunity to flourish. Journalists must be allowed to do their job of scrutinising the powerful and holding them to account. Pakistan must demonstrate that it will investigate these crimes with vigour.”
This
week, The International Federation of Journalists has sent
an international delegation to Pakistan. The 5-member
delegation are meeting with union leaders, media persons,
civil society representatives from four provinces to assess
the situation for journalists, in particular with regards to
their safety and job security.
The delegation will be
meeting media owners and government officials to impress
upon them the importance of a safe and independent media and
discuss ways in which the policy and legal environment can
support press freedom and allow the media to fulfill their
democratic function.
A National Meeting will be held on the 5th March attended by government, civil society and media representatives from around the country to discuss the delegations’ findings and ways in which various groups can jointly support a safe and independent media.
ENDS