South Asia Media Solidarity Network Bulletin - January 2011
Welcome to the monthly e-bulletin of the South Asia Media Solidarity Network (SAMSN). The next bulletin will be sent on February 15, 2010 and inputs are most welcome. We encourage contributions to let others know what you are doing; to seek solidarity and support from other SAMSN members; and to find out what others are doing in the region.
In this bulletin:
1. Journalism
Under Attack in Pakistan
2. Death Threats
Against Journalists in India’s Chhattisgarh
State
3. Two New IFJ Reports
Released
4. Eminent Pakistani Journalist
Minhaj Barna Honoured
5. Attack on
Journalist Covering Sri Lanka Floods
6.
Concern Over Government Influence on Maldives Media,
Intimidation of Interviewees
7. Two
Pakistan Channels Fined for Breaches in Assassination
Coverage
8. Wage Board Report Submitted
for Indian Journalists
9. Applications
Invited – Maldives College of Higher Education, Dart
Fellowship
1. Journalism Under Attack in
Pakistan
SAMSN partner, the Pakistan Federal Union of
Journalists (PFUJ) expressed outrage as two journalists were
killed in the first two weeks of 2011, following a horror
year in 2010 in which 15 journalists were killed in the
country. Ilyas Nazar, who was found dead in Pidarak,
Balochistan province on January 5, was a journalist with the
Baloch language magazine Darwanth. On January 14, the
bullet-riddled body of Wali Khan Babar, a reporter for Geo
News channel was found in the Liaqatabad neighbourhood of
Karachi, in close proximity to the office of the local
police chief. Babar’s death is being reported as a case of
targeted killing while investigations are yet to establish
the motives behind Nazar’s murder.
See: http://asiapacific.ifj.org/en/articles/ifj-demands-inquiry-as-another-journalist-killed-in-balochistan; and http://www.thenews.com.pk/TodaysPrintDetail.aspx?ID=3291&Cat=13&dt=1/14/2011.
2. Death Threats Against Journalists in
India’s Chhattisgarh State
The IFJ has joined the
working journalists’ union in India’s Chhattisgarh state
and other SAMSN partners in denouncing the implicit death
threat made against three journalists in an unsigned letter
circulated on December 11, purportedly from a body for the
advancement of indigenous communities. The letter commends a
police official for his role in combating a long-running
Maoist insurgency in the southern district of Dantewada in
the state. The letter identifies three local journalists by
name and warns them that they cannot live for long "under
the garb of human rights" and would meet a "dog's death" if
they did not leave the region. The journalists mentioned are
N.R.K. Pillay, vice-president of the state-wide union of
working journalists, the Chhattisgarh Shramjeevi Patrakar
Sangh (CSPS), Anil Mishra, former district correspondent of
the Hindi language daily Nai Duniya, and Yashwant
Yadav of Deshbandhu, a widely-read and respected
Hindi daily in the state.
See: http://asiapacific.ifj.org/en/articles/ifj-condemns-death-threats-against-journalists-in-india-s-chhattisgarh-state
3. Two New IFJ Reports Released
Freedom in Solidarity: Media Working for
Peace in South Asia, an IFJ report on collective
action for media freedom, written in collaboration with
SAMSN partners in Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri
Lanka, is now available in six languages. The English
original of the report and translations in Bengali; Hindi; Nepali; Sinhala; and Tamil are now available online. An Urdu
translation is also available and can be requested by
contacting the IFJ at ifj@ifj-asia.org.
The IFJ also announces the release of a new report titled Reporting for All: Challenges for the Media in Nepal’s Democratic Transition, available online now. The report has been prepared in partnership with the Federation of Nepali Journalists and other SAMSN partners in Nepal, and is the outcome of a year-long project which involved media monitoring, training workshops and focus group discussions with a wide cross-section of the country’s journalists. The report is available in both English and Nepali.
See: http://asiapacific.ifj.org/en/pages/ifj-asia-pacific-reports
4. Homage to Eminent
Pakistani Journalist Minhaj Barna
The IFJ and SAMSN
partners joined the Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists
(PFUJ) and other associates in Pakistan in paying homage to
Minhaj Mohammad Khan Barna, legendary journalist and fighter
for press freedom, who died on January 14 aged 85. Barna was
actively associated with the PFUJ from its early days and
served several terms as its president and was the founding
chairman of the All Pakistan Newspaper Employees’
Confederation. As a journalist, he worked in a number of
Pakistan’s leading dailies, both Urdu and English, and
served as a foreign correspondent in London and New
York.
See: http://tribune.com.pk/story/103759/mihaj-barna-founding-member-of-pakistans-print-media-dies/
5. Attack on Journalist Covering Sri Lanka
Floods
SAMSN partners in Sri Lanka report that
P.M.M.A Cader, a senior journalist with the Associated
Newspapers of Ceylon Limited was assaulted by an
elected official of the Kalmunai Municipal
Council, in the Ampara district in the country’s
Eastern province on January 4. The attack came after
Cader’s refusal to change his reporting of flood relief
efforts to reflect the official version of events provided
by a Sri Lanka Muslim Congress politician. No arrest has
been made for the assault as yet.
See: http://nfrsrilanka.blogspot.com/2011/01/assault-on-tamil-media-personnel.html
6. Concern Over Government Influence
on Maldives Media, Intimidation of Interviewees
SAMSN
partner the Maldives Journalists’ Association (MJA)
expressed concern over government misuse of state-owned
media outlets in the lead up to the country’s local
council elections in February. According to MJA reports, the
Maldives National Broadcasting Corporation has been
supportive of the country’s ruling party and its
candidates. The MJA has also raised concerns over a
disturbing trend for protests targeting interview subjects
outside media outlets VTV, DhiTV and MNBC One. The protests
have seen many interviewees leave the broadcasters under a
police escort, which the MJA believes is an affront to
freedom of expression as enshrined in the Maldives
constitution.
See: http://mja.org.mv/index.php/news/153-regarding-the-local-councils-elections
and http://www.mja.org.mv/index.php/news/154-concern-on-challenges-faced-to-media
7. Two Pakistan Channels Fined
for Breaches in Assassination Coverage
The Pakistan
Electronic Media Regulatory Authority (PEMRA) has fined two
of the country’s news channels, Samaa and Waqt TV, for
coverage of a recent political assassination that it has
held to be contrary to the norms of fair and responsible
news reporting. The channels have been held liable for PKR
(Pakistan rupees) 1 million each, for allegedly inciting
violence and promoting acts of terror by among other things,
repeatedly airing an interview with the man presently being
held for the assassination of Punjab Governor Salman Taseer
on January 4.
See: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-south-asia-12186897
8. Wage Board Report Submitted for Indian
Journalists
SAMSN partners in India are preparing for
the next phase of negotiation and struggle after submission
of the report of the wage board constituted under national
law for determination of the wages of working journalists.
The report, and another dealing with non-journalists working
in the newspaper industry, were submitted on December 31 by
G.R. Majithia, a retired judge of an Indian high court, who
chaired both the boards. Indian unions have reacted
cautiously to the report, welcoming some of its provisions
and calling for improvements in others.
See: http://asiapacific.ifj.org/en/articles/ifj-welcomes-new-wage-award-for-india-s-journalists-and-calls-for-full-compliance
9. Applications Invited – Maldives
College of Higher Education, Dart Fellowship
The
Faculty of the Arts in the Maldives College of Higher
Education is seeking to recruit a lecturer to handle its
diploma course in journalism. The selected candidate will
report to the Dean of the Faculty and will be responsible
for instruction of students in the second year of a two-year
diploma program. The topics of interest include news
reporting and writing, journalism law and ethics, radio
reporting and television reporting. One position for a
period of one year or two positions for six months each
would be available.
See: http://www.mche.edu.mv
Applications are also invited for the Dart Asia Fellowship for 2011 awarded by the Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma. The fellowship is intended to promote responsible and credible reporting on violent and traumatic events — on street crime, family violence, natural disasters and accidents, civil unrest, war and genocide.
See: http://dartcenter.org/content/new-dart-asia-fellowships
ENDS