Pakistan TV fights back

Glad to see the media fighting this State of Emergency decree

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071109/ap_on_re_as/pakistan_tv_fights_back

By ROBIN McDOWELL, Associated Press Writer Fri Nov 9, 3:09 PM ET

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - TV journalist Asma Chaudhry runs from baton-wielding police, shields her face as they fire tear gas and then describes to viewers how yet another protest against Pakistan’s military ruler has been brutally crushed.
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A tape of her broadcast is rushed to one of Geo TV’s secret transmission sites and fed to the United Arab Emirates. Within minutes, millions of Pakistanis are watching it via satellite or Internet — thanks to newly created online video streams.

When President Gen. Pervez Musharraf announced a media blackout following his imposition of emergency rule on Saturday, he underestimated the determination of independent television networks and the desire of the country’s 160 million people to get news.

“The media didn’t cow down, they struck back,” said Adnan Rehmat, who heads Internews Pakistan, a Washington-based media watchdog. “As soon as channels were taken off the air, they quickly created and found new ways to ensure that the flow of information did not stop.”

The television news landscape has changed dramatically since Musharraf seized power in a 1999 coup, when the only available option to viewers was state-run Pakistan TV. Twenty independent stations have sprung up since then. There are also at least 5 million Internet users, nurturing a huge dependence on real-time information.

The government’s response was to cut access to cable, the source of the news.

“They thought, somehow, if we turn off TV sets, no one will get any information,” said Rehmat, recalling the local expression ‘close you’re eyes and the mountain goes away.’

“Well that’s not really a sophisticated take on things, especially when you look at how the country has progressed on the IT front.”

Geo TV, the most popular of the independent TV stations that started hitting the airwaves in 2002, has always transmitted news to Dubai via satellite and maintained facilities there — in part, owner Imran Aslam said, “because we realized there would be a time when, eventually, we would face a situation like this.”

There have been numerous attempts to muzzle the press throughout Pakistan’s 60-year history, much of which has involved military rule.

Immediately after Musharraf imposed his state of emergency, authorities installed a nearby satellite system and matched frequencies with Geo TV, jamming the signal and forcing the station to change its transmission tactics, said Hamid Mir, the company’s executive editor in the capital, Islamabad.

“Not even the producer knows where we’re feeding from now,” he said. “We change the site every few days.”

It is one of many challenges the station is facing, the most pervasive being concerns over security.

The Geo TV office, which runs on a bustling street across from parliament, is now ringed by dozens of police, many clutching bamboo sticks.

“They’re not here for our protection,” quipped Mir, a 20-year news veteran, who for the first time in his career has guards at his office and at home. “We’re trying to survive on an hourly basis, not day-to-day or weekly, because we don’t know when they will storm in and arrest me.”

Police raided Geo TV in March after it aired live coverage of clashes between police and lawyers supporting Iftikhar Mohammed Chaudhry, the independent-minded chief justice who was removed from his post following Musharraf’s state of emergency. Equipment was broken and journalists were beaten.

Keeping the news coming has also been difficult. Reporters say even close sources within the government are no longer answering their phone calls. Journalists have also been barred from covering some events, like parliament’s rubber-stamping this week of Musharraf’s emergency decree.

Government officials are also hesitant to go on camera.

One solution has been to send several analysts and political activists to Dubai, so programs could continue to be churned out. Though the anchors refrain from editorializing, the opposition view in this way continues to get out.

“We are fighting that our screen should not be empty, we cannot go black,” said Mir, who sees Musharraf’s stranglehold of the media as a sign of his imminent demise. “I can tell you from past experience. This is a last desperate attempt to save himself.”

But perhaps the most dramatic changes in recent years have come with greater access to the Internet, said Rehmat, who said there are about 5 million users.

“With several people in each house having access as well, the real number is probably closer to 13 million, and that’s a huge number,” he said, noting that there are also about 70 million mobile phone users, further speeding the spread of news, mostly by text message.

As soon as Musharraf ordered the media stranglehold, GEO TV started live video streaming — a sequence of moving images that are sent in compressed form over the Internet and displayed by the viewer as they arrive.

The number of simultaneous users immediately jumped from 100,000 to more than 300,000. That forced the Web site to go “light” by removing all other content except for text updates, said Asif Latif, the Web master at GEO’s Karachi headquarters.

“We were completely flooded,” he said, adding that at times more than 700,000 hits are now tallied.

The crackdown is taking a financial toll as well, with a loss in advertising revenues.

“It’s a huge amount of money that we’re losing” said Aslam, the station’s owner, though he was unable to provide any dollar figures. “It’s going to have an impact, obviously, on our staff and the industry as a whole.”

“There are already signs of nervousness,” he said, referring to security jitters. “As soon as it hits people’s wallets, I’m afraid they will walk away.”

But reporters say the crackdown has only emboldened them.

“If anything, it’s given me more courage,” said Chaudhry, 27, one of the few female journalists in Pakistan who goes regularly into the front lines to cover the deepening political crisis.

“Five years ago, I was a very shy girl. I was not at all outspoken,” Chaudhry said. She gives credit to her mother, who died four years ago, for encouraging her to accept an on-camera job even when other relatives said it was no place for a Muslim woman.

Today they too are calling her for constant updates, sometimes while she’s fleeing a melee.

“Now I’m used to speaking freely and I’m definitely going to tell the Pakistani people what their rights are,” Chaudhry said. “I feel it’s my duty.”

Re: Pakistan TV fights back

What was that we used to read in these forums, oh yes:

Long live the free media. :jhanda:

Re: Pakistan TV fights back

They can go to this length to stop the tranmission of GEO TV while in Swat the amateur FM radio continued to spew even after the martial law was imposed. I dont get it.

Re: Pakistan TV fights back

nside Pakistan: Sky Special Report

By Alex Crawford
In Islamabad
Updated:15:23, Thursday November 08, 2007
Emergency rule in Pakistan means fear and outright intimidation for some.
Police barricades are on many street corners
Police barricades are on many street corners

To the bulk of the population though, to all intents and purposes, life is carrying on here as normal.

The shops are open, the roads are full of cars being driven to work, the hotels are still functioning.

But at many street corners there are sandbags and soldiers with guns behind them.

The centre of the capital is virtually sealed off. All roads leading to President House and the Supreme Court are inaccessible.

The General has barricaded himself in. Even the army tennis courts which stand next door to the entrance to the Prime Minister’s residence are under guard.

You only have to scrape the veneer ever so slightly to discover normality is all a façade.

The courts have ground to a halt. Half the country’s Supreme Court judges have been dismissed including the top judge, Iftikhar Chaudary who was asking uncomfortable questions about General Musharraf’s eligibility to stand for re-election as President.

Anyone who is arrested - and there are hundreds - simply disappear into the bowels of the system. You can’t get access to them, you can’t even find out information about where they have been taken.

In the five days since emergency rule, it seems the protests are growing but only very slowly and tentatively.
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Up until now it’s been the beleagured legal fraternity which has been leading the charge.

Now we have seen Benazir Bhutto - the former Prime Minister and the leader of the PPP, the country’s largest opposition group has finally called her people out onto the streets.

She has said - much to the relief of many of her supporters that “the talks are off” with the General.

And she has thrown down the political gauntlet by challenging him to resign and take off his uniform by Friday November 9.

But, being the astute politician she is, she has given him another week to carry out her demands before she urges her people to take to the streets.

She has said they will start a long march from Lahore to Islamabad, several hundred miles away from November 13.

The Serena Hotel in Islamabad has turned into an international media camp with camera crews and journalists from around the world gathering to report on the turmoil in this geographically sensitive, nuclear-powered country.

There is a big contingent from America and Britain with all the main stations represented here but also France, Italy, Germany, Canada and of course Al Jazeera.
Benazir Bhutto rallies her supporters
Benazir Bhutto rallies her supporters

Reporting is difficult, but not impossible. The General has cut off the array of private television stations which used to broadcast here including the recently launched English-speaking Dawn news.

The ‘independent’ media which he said he encouraged and which he used to constantly refer to in his interviews and his news conferences, is now comprehensively silenced.

But the world has moved on since Musharraf first came to power in a coup in 1999 and the people of Pakistan are finding out the news through the internet.

The foreign journalists have so far been left alone. The Pakistani authorities instead are preferring to turn their attention to their fellow citizens. The journalists here face daily intimidation.

They are viewed as agitators of the trouble. So when the private channel, Geo TV broadcast live pictures of lawyers protesting about Musharraf sacking the top judge - this was way back in July - paramilitary police armed with guns and tear-gas canisters stormed their offices and fired off tear gas inside the newsroom.

When the Sky team visited the offices - now operating under emergency rule we found a resilient and brave bunch.
Geo TV’s Hamid Mir
Geo TV’s Hamid Mir

The executive editor for Geo TV in Islamabad is Hamid Mir, a well-known and respected journalist in Pakistan, but one who has proved an irritant to the establishment here.

He has good contacts which means he’s well informed and he’s not easily spooked.

The secret intelligence police (ISI) have tried bribing and threatening him in equal measure.

Now they are turning to his family. “I am not scared for myself,” he told Sky News.

“But I have to think of my family. I don’t sleep in the same place every night and now I am moving my family to a safe place.”

For those who cannot understand this anxiousness, read this excerpt from an email sent to Geo TV’s editor in chief, Mir Shakil ur Rahman.

"The Army is the backbone of Pakistan. Tell your hosts, your news reporters and transmission people to stop misleading Pakistani people, stop giving space to corrupt politicians and mullahs.

“The Army is the backbone of Pakistan. Don’t try to damage it. If you do, you and your family who have looted billions would be hunted down like rats.”

It goes on: 'It will take just a few hundred people to smash your studios, offices, vans, etc."

Many of the reporters are routinely followed home, have their telephones bugged, their homes ransacked and their families frightened.

Mr Mir said: "I am a 24-hour journalist. This is my bread and butter. I cannot think for a minute that I will accept this pressure.

"It’s against my ethics. So I have not accepted it and we are operating outside Pakistan and they can see our reports all over the world.

“The channel broadcasts via satellite to UK, US and Middle East. It is only the broadcast in Pakistan which has been disrupted.”

Tough words from a tough man.