South Asia Media Solidarity Network - March 2013
South Asia Media Solidarity Network - March 2013
Welcome to the e-bulletin of the South Asia Media Solidarity Network (SAMSN) for the month of March 2013. The next bulletin will be sent on April 15, 2013, 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.
To contribute, email: ifj@ifj-asia.org
SAMSN is a group of journalists’ trade unions, press freedom organisations and journalists in South Asia that have agreed to work together to support freedom of expression and association in the region. SAMSN was formed at a meeting of these groups in Kathmandu, Nepal, in September 2004. The group agreed to stand in solidarity and work together for media reform, for an independent pluralist media and to build public respect for the work of journalists in the region.
For further information on SAMSN, visit: www.ifj-asia.org/page/samsn.html
1.
Three Pakistan journalists slain inside a week
The
crisis of safety for journalists in Pakistan was again in
evidence. Between the February 25th to March 1st three
journalists were killed in separate incidents in three
provinces of the country. 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. 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. On March 1, Mehmood Ahmed Afridi, a
correspondent for the newspaper Intikhab, was killed by
gunmen travelling by motorcycle in Kalat, in the
south-western province of Balochistan.
These tragic events occurred during the same week that an IFJ international delegation - with SAMSN partner the Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists (PFUJ) - was undertaking an assessment of the press freedom situation in a country now regarded as among the most dangerous for journalists and meeting with high level officials to advocate for stronger measures to ensure journalists are able to report freely and safely.
Further details at: http://asiapacific.ifj.org/en/articles/journalist-shot-killed-in-pakistan-pfuj-demands-arrest-of-killers and http://asiapacific.ifj.org/en/articles/three-journalists-slain-in-one-week.
2.
Indian journalist discharged in terror case; another granted
bail
SAMSN has welcomed the release of Muthiur Rahman
Siddiqui, a journalist based in Bengaluru (formerly
Bangalore) in the southern Indian state of Karnataka, after
six months in detention on terror charges. The twenty-six
year old reporter and sub-editor with the Deccan
Herald, Bengaluru’s oldest and most well-known
newspaper group was arrested by local police on August 27
last year, on charges of involvement in a plot hatched by
overseas terror groups to kill a number of well-known public
figures in the city. The police failed to produce any
credible evidence implicating him in the alleged plot
leading to his discharge. In another development in the same
state of India, K.K. Shahina, a senior investigative
journalist, was granted bail in a case of criminal
intimidation of witnesses, filed following a story she wrote
for the weekly magazine Tehelka in December
2010.
Further details at: http://asiapacific.ifj.org/en/articles/indian-journalist-released-after-six-months-detention-on-terror-charges; and http://asiapacific.ifj.org/en/articles/bail-granted-for-indian-journalist-but-worries-persist-over-political-pressures.
3.
Journalists injured in Bangladesh political turmoil; another
attacked with bombs
SAMSN partners in Bangladesh have
expressed their deep concern at the injuries suffered by a
number of journalists in attacks by political activists in
the cities of Dhaka and Chittagong, as protests engulfed
Bangladesh on February 22. At least ten journalists were
injured when activists of the Islamic political party, the
Jamaat-e-Islami and its student wing, the Chhatra Shibir,
demanding the dispersal of youth protesters gathered in
another quarter of the city, clashed with police in the
national capital Dhaka.
In another event which is possibly connected to the ongoing political turmoil, Nayeemul Islam Khan, editor of the daily newspaper Amader Orthoneeti, and his wife Nasima Khan, were injured when the car they were travelling in after attending a social function in Dhaka on the night of March 11, was attacked with petrol bombs.
Further details at: http://asiapacific.ifj.org/en/articles/journalists-injured-as-political-protests-engulf-bangladesh and http://asiapacific.ifj.org/en/articles/ifj-condemns-bomb-attack-on-newspaper-editor-in-bangladesh.
4.
Physical attacks on journalists peak in
Maldives
SAMSN partner, the Maldives Journalists’
Association (MJA), has sharply condemned three attacks
against journalists in the island nation on Friday, February
22. In the most serious incident, Ibrahim Waheed Aswad, news
head of the Rajje TV channel was hit on the head with an
iron rod near the artificial beach area in the Maldivian
capital city of Male. He suffered serious injuries to the
head and face and has since been transferred for critical
medical treatment to the Sri Lankan capital city of Colombo.
Just prior to this incident, two women in senior editorial
and reporting functions at the Maldives Broadcasting
Corporation (MBC), Aishath Liza and Aminath Saani, were
assaulted in the city and a packet full of a corrosive
industrial fluid thrown at them. Both suffered burn
injuries.
Further details at: http://asiapacific.ifj.org/en/articles/ifj-joins-in-condemnation-of-multiple-attacks-on-journalists-in-the-maldives.
5.
Maldives privileges law may endanger press
freedom
SAMSN partner, the Maldives Journalists
Association (MJA) has sounded an alarm over a recently
passed Parliamentary Privileges Act that could soon become
law. Initially passed by the Maldives parliament, the Majlis
in December 2012, the act was returned by President Mohammad
Waheed for reconsideration. In passing the act afresh,
overriding the presidential veto, the Majlis has indicated
its intention to convert his act into law without further
delay. The MJA believes that section 17(a) of the act which
empowers Parliament or one of its committees to summon
anyone to “give witness or to hand over any information”
of interest, is too broad in its provisions and could
undermine the constitutional protection that journalists
currently enjoy.
Further details at: http://asiapacific.ifj.org/en/articles/new-maldives-law-on-parliamentary-privilege-could-impact-journalistic-freedom.
6.
SAMSN partner, DUJ, submits memorandum as India opens public
consultations on media ownership
The Delhi Union of
Journalists (DUJ), a SAMSN partner, has made a submission to
a public consultation on rules of media ownership. The
process was initiated by the Telecom Regulatory Authority of
India (TRAI) on a mandate from India’s Ministry of
Information and Broadcasting. A consultation paper was
introduced on February 15 and comments and recommendations
will be received until April 15.
Further details at: http://asiapacific.ifj.org/en/articles/ifj-calls-for-broad-union-participation-in-evolution-of-ownership-rules-for-indian-media.
7.
Indian union opposes minimum entry qualifications for
journalists
SAMSN partners in India, including the
Delhi Union of Journalists (DUJ) have advised that a recent
move by the Press Council of India to impose minimum
academic qualifications for entry into the profession of
journalism, be abandoned. The move was announced by the PCI
through a March 12 press note introduced by its chairman
Markandey Katju, a former judge of the Supreme Court of
India.
Further details at: http://asiapacific.ifj.org/en/articles/rethink-move-to-impose-minimum-entry-requirements-for-indias-journalists.
8.
IFJ and PFUJ conclude press freedom mission in
Pakistan
The IFJ along with SAMSN partner, the
Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists, concluded a press
freedom mission in Pakistan between March 2 and 6. The
mission team which included former IFJ president Christopher
Warren, senior Nepali editor Kanak Mani Dixit and President
of the Alliance of Independent Journalists (AJI) Eko
Maryadi and IFJ and PFUJ staff, concluded meetings in
Karachi and Lahore, before arriving in Pakistan’s national
capital of Islamabad for two days of meetings, followed by a
national conference on March 5. The national conference was
addressed by Federal Interior Minister Rehman Malik among
several others. A complete report from the mission is under
preparation, for release before March end.
IFJ
Asia-Pacific
http://asiapacific.ifj.org
ifj@ifj-asia.org
SAMSN Members:
Afghan Independent Journalists' Association,
Afghanistan
Bangladesh Journalists' Rights Forum (BJRF),
Bangladesh
Dhaka Reporters' Unity, Bangladesh
All
India Newspapers Employees' Federation (AINEF),
India
Indian Journalists' Union (IJU), India
National
Union of Journalists India (NUJI), India
Maldives
Journalists Association
Federation of Nepali Journalists
(FNJ), Nepal
National Union of Journalists Nepal (NUJN),
Nepal
Nepal Press Union (NPU), Nepal
Pakistan Federal
Union of Journalists (PFUJ), Pakistan
Pakistan Press
Foundation, Pakistan
Sri Lanka Working Journalists
Association (SLWJA), Sri Lanka
Federation of Media
Employees' Trade Unions (FMETU), Sri Lanka
Free Media
Movement (FMM), Sri Lanka
Bangladesh Manobadhikar
Sangbadik Forum (BMSF: Human Rights Journalists Forum of
Bangladesh)
Media Watch,
Bangladesh