PAKISTAN: Press Attacked Again — Editorial
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Tragically, journalists in Pakistan are under fire not only from shadowy security agencies and religious extremists. They must also contend with local hooligans, often supporters of one or the other political party or belonging to a particular group, says Pakistan's 'The Dawn' editorial on Jan 2. This observation is underscored by Thursday’s horrendous incident in Hyderabad in which Dawn’s correspondent M.H. Khan was attacked, allegedly by activists of Mumtaz Bhutto’s Sindh National Front. According to our badly injured correspondent, his assailants, who used iron rods in the attack, abused him for daring to question the SNF chief, whose statement, and a subsequent clarification, on the NFC award had been carried in Dawn recently. If investigations – and we hope that a thorough, unbiased enquiry is carried out soon and the perpetrators brought to justice – prove the SNF’s involvement then it would not be the first time that the party has indulged in such lawless behaviour. Last year, the SNF, taking umbrage at another report, had set fire to Dawn offices in Hyderabad and other places in Sindh. Besides, its activists have been held responsible for beating up reporters of Sindhi-language papers and ransacking the latter’s offices. Surely there are more civilised ways of refuting a report or putting across a point of view. To read the full editorial, click here. |








Aung Htun (not his real name) is one of the young video journalists featured in the award-winning feature documentary 'Burma VJ (Reporting from a Closed Country)'. 