Pakistan

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Pakistan

1159 articles
Missing journalist Zeenat Shahzadi, who was last seen on 19 August 2015, Facebook

IFJ expresses concern over Pakistani journalist missing since 2015

The family of missing journalist Zeenat Shahzadi alleges that she was targeted by Pakistan’s Special Forces for her reporting.

Link to: Groups call for Pakistan’s Upper House to reject prevention of cybercrime law

Groups call for Pakistan’s Upper House to reject prevention of cybercrime law

Pakistani groups express their grave concerns over the recent developments regarding the passage of the Prevention of Electronic Crimes Bill 2016 by the national assembly and reject the bill in its current shape.

A month after he was injured in an attack, journalist Hamid Mir waves to a woman as he leaves the Supreme Court in Islamabad, 19 May 2014, AP Photo/Anjum Naveed

Pakistani group calls for release of official report into 2014 attack against journalist Hamid Mir

PPF appealed to the Chief Justice, Supreme Court of Pakistan, to direct the concerned authorities to clarify if the leaked report on the 2014 attack on a journalist is authentic, and if it is to release it officially along with all annexures and appendixes.

Officials from the Pakistan Human Rights Commission present their report in Islamabad, Pakistan, in April 2014., B.K. Bangash, AP

Journalist’s killer sentenced to life imprisonment in Pakistan

Ayub Khattak was killed in October 2013 over his reporting on the local drug scene; the conviction of his killer marks only the third such conviction in Pakistan, where the IFJ has recorded over 100 murders of journalists since 2000.

Bytes for All

Encrypt for Freedom! Cartoons about why we need encryption

Bytes for All, based in Pakistan, has released a series of graphics to help explain in simple terms why encryption is so important to our everyday lives and our freedom.

Pakistani investigators collect evidence from the site of an attack on ARY news channel's office in Islamabad, Pakistan, 13 January 2016, AP Photo/Anjum Naveed

Hand grenade thrown, shots fired in attack on TV office in Islamabad, Pakistan

Unidentified attackers hurled a hand grenade at the Islamabad bureau office of ARY News. They also threw pamphlets claiming that the Islamic State’s Afghanistan chapter carried out the attack ‘in reaction to the channels coverage of on-going operation Zarb-e-Azb’.

Pakistani journalists shout slogans to condemn the killing of journalists, 9 September 2015 in Peshawar, Pakistan, AP Photo/Mohammad Sajjad

Attacks on journalists in Pakistan met with impunity in 2015

Not a single case relating to violence against media in 2015 resulted in arrests and prosecution, despite repeated assurances by government ministers.

A Pakistani woman uses her mobile phone to take a photograph of a fighter aircraft during a ceremony in Islamabad, 6 September 2015, AP Photo/Anjum Naveed

Pakistani government urged to explain arbitrary mobile blackouts in Islamabad

In December 2015, Bytes for All demanded that Pakistani authorities explain the mobile network shutdowns taking place in Islamabad, roughly coinciding with the time of Friday sermons at mosques.

Link to: Thanks Blackberry, but please be consistent: On the company’s exit from Pakistan

Thanks Blackberry, but please be consistent: On the company’s exit from Pakistan

Bytes for All, Pakistan welcomes a recent decision by mobile phone manufacturer Blackberry Ltd to end its operations in Pakistan in the face of demands by the government to give it unfettered access to its customers’ private encrypted data.

Link to: Pakistan: TV station employee, two policemen injured in ISIS grenade attack

Pakistan: TV station employee, two policemen injured in ISIS grenade attack

ISIS has claimed responsibility for an attack on Din News television channel in Lahore and has warned of further agression against the media. The same group was behind the recent targeting of Dunya News in Faisalabad, Punjab provice.

Link to: Country report: The right to information in Pakistan

Country report: The right to information in Pakistan

ARTICLE 19 examines Pakistan’s Constitution, legislative framework and the implementation of right to information laws.

REUTERS/Muhammad Hamed

Civil society organisations remain seriously concerned by Pakistan’s Prevention of Electronic Crimes Bill

International and domestic civil society organisation are calling for Pakistan’s Prevention of Electronic Crimes bill to be scrapped and the process of creating a new bill that reflects international human rights standards and respects the Constitution to begin again.

Link to: Christian web TV channel destroyed in a fire in Karachi, Pakistan

Christian web TV channel destroyed in a fire in Karachi, Pakistan

The office of the Christian web television channel, Gawahi, was destroyed in a fire that erupted in the early hours of 23 November, in Karachi, the biggest city in Pakistan.

REUTERS/Faisal Mahmood

Debating faith in cyberspace: Offline consequences of online religious expression in Pakistan

A new Bytes for All research study shows that Pakistani authorities are blocking online expression of religious minorities, while banned organisations continue to enjoy impunity.

Link to: Taliban claim responsibility for killing of tribal journalist in Pakistan

Taliban claim responsibility for killing of tribal journalist in Pakistan

One day after the International Day to End Impunity for Crimes against Journalists, journalist Zaman Mehsud was killed when unidentified gunmen opened fire on his motorcycle in Tank, a district in Khyber Pahktunkhwa province, Pakistan.

Pakistani journalists shout slogans to condemn the killing of journalists, Wednesday, 9 September 2015 in Peshawar, Pakistan. Placard on right reads "stop attacks on media.", AP Photo/Mohammad Sajjad

Crimes, but no punishment: A report on impunity in Pakistan

A report on the safety of Pakistani media professionals presents a bleak picture of the level of insecurity faced by Pakistani journalists and calls for serious efforts by governments and the media to change the present situation whereby those that kill, injure, abduct and threaten journalists are almost never punished.