Pakistani media faces threat, AAJ tv Office attacked.

security guards were injured.
TTP claimed responsibility, they are saying if you dont run our version, these attacks will continue!

News Night with Talat 26-6-12 | Saach TV

Talat Hussain speaks about it, whereas other channels have completely ignored this news.

re: Pakistani media faces threat, AAJ tv Office attacked.

They were attacked on 12 May 2007 too .

re: Pakistani media faces threat, AAJ tv Office attacked.

was in same youtube clip where a PPP activist was handing out weapons to other activists from her car?

re: Pakistani media faces threat, AAJ tv Office attacked.

If I'm not wrong, MQM men attacked aaj tv office in 2007, because they wanted them to stop the live footage of city unrest

re: Pakistani media faces threat, AAJ tv Office attacked.

  • Pakistani media faces renewed threat*

**new dilemma

While journalists have always been under threat on the field, they now face a new challenge back at their news organisations’ headquarters.On the night of June 25, 2012, four gunmen on motorcycles attacked the offices](http://dawn.com/2012/06/26/taliban-attack-television-office-in-karachi-two-injured/) of a Karachi-based news channel, Aaj TV, located in one of the busiest parts of the city. With just two people wounded, this was neither the deadliest attack on media-men, nor the first time that the Aaj TV office had been hit by armed assailants.
The channel had** faced a similar assault**](http://archives.dawn.com/dawnftp/72.249.57.55/dawnftp/2007/05/15/top8.htm) five years ago, but this fresh attack was different in nature as it unveiled a new dilemma for the media.

The Pakistani Taliban claimed responsibility for last week’s shooting on the office, claiming they had hit the channel for not giving full coverage to the Jihadi movement, and threatening further attacks on other media outlets that did not air the Taliban point of view.

The warning leaves media organisations caught between a rock and a hard place as they cover Pakistan’s war against militancy. **An ordinance issued by Pemra, the government’s media regulatory body, prohibits news channels from accommodating the insurgents’ viewpoint, forbidding them from broadcasting “statements and pronouncements of militants and extremist elements.”
**
Ali Dayan Hasan, Director of Human Rights Watch (HRW) in Pakistan, calls the threat a “direct attack on media freedom.”

We have seen repeated attacks on and threats to individual journalists by militant groups – particularly Al Qaeda and Taliban affiliates. However, the attack on Aaj TV is the first organised targeting of an entire media group with a view to coercing the industry into providing coverage more to the liking of the TTP. This is a direct attack on media freedom and is a chilling indication of how vulnerable journalists are not just in the field but now even in their offices and studios.”
Though the government was quick to condemn the incident, with the newly-elected prime minister issuing a statement the same night, some think the response was inadequate considering the attack was carried out against the industry and not just one organisation.
**
There are two police vehicles now placed permanently outside our office, with Rangers personnel doing the rounds for further security,” says Rafiq Azad, a reporter for Aaj TV.
“But, given this was an act of aggression not just against us but other news channels as well, this is not enough.”**

“This was a sign of panic…an old tactic being reused by the terrorists to instill fear into the hearts and minds of the journalism community,” Information Minister Qamar Zaman Zaman Kaira told Dawn.com. “We condemn this and any such acts of terrorism. We have been in contact with some journalists’ bodies and associations, and the Pakistani government is willing to provide any sort of protection to the press.”

However, the response from journalists’ unions and associations was rather weak.
The attack also received little airplay on local media, compared to the international media’s coverage of the incident. A popular talk show aired the next day also focused on the same aspect.

“**Unfortunately, what we saw was a backlash from other channels when reporting this incident. A few who did report [it] refrained from naming us or the Taliban, with some headlines calling it an ‘incident of firing at Gurumandir,’” **complains reporter Rafiq Azad.

“Many elements of the media already present a Taliban-apologist narrative, as do many politicians, not just out of political sympathy but out of a desire for self-preservation,” says Hasan, the HRW’s country director. “[However], it is difficult to say whether the muted reaction to the attack on Aaj TV was a function of fear, incomprehension and indifference or a combination of all.”

“What is clear is that if the state allows recurrence of such attacks, it will have dangerous repercussions not just for the media but broader society as well,” says Hasan, who has also worked as a journalist in the past. “Unless addressed, this event is likely to have very serious consequences for both the security of media personnel and also media ethics. Unless journalists feel secure enough to report freely on the TTP, a level of self-censorship born of fear will be the very least of the issues that will arise.”

“Obviously, we are human beings…we are also part of the same society. We have families too. We, too, fear for our security,” says Azad. “But this is our job, this is what we do.”

Pakistani media faces renewed threat | DAWN.COM