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Exposed: How Pakistani media bosses told their papers/TVs to support Dhernas

Saifullah Sani

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Not Fit to Print: An Insider Account of Pakistani Censorship
BY NEHA ANSARI

"Imran [Khan], [Tahir ul] Qadri, and the ISI [Inter-Services Intelligence] are our best friends," our weekly editorial meeting at Pakistan's Express Tribune was (jokingly) told on Aug. 13, 2014, a day before the two political leaders began their separate long marches from Lahore to Islamabad, and plunged the country into crisis. "We know it's not easy, but that's the way it is -- at least for now. I promise to make things better soon," said the editor, who had called the meeting to inform us about the media group's editorial policy during the sit-ins and protests that would eventually, momentarily paralyze the Pakistani government.
The senior editorial staff, myself included, reluctantly agreed to the orders, which came from the CEO, because our jobs were on the line. Media groups in Pakistan are family-owned and make all decisions unilaterally -- regardless of whether they concern marketing and finance or editorial content and policy -- advancing their personal agendas through the influential mainstream outlets at their disposal. A majority of the CEOs and media house owners are businessmen, with no background (or interest) in the ethics of journalism. The owners and publishers make it very clear to their newsrooms and staff -- including the editor -- that any tilt or gloss they proscribe is non-negotiable. As a result, serious concerns persist about violence against and the intimidation of members of the media. In fact, Pakistan ranks 158 out of 180 countries in the 2014 World Press Freedom Index.
Yet there is also a more elusive problem within the country's press landscape: the collusion of Pakistan's powerful military and the nation's media outlets. I experienced this first-hand while I worked as a journalist at the Express Tribune during the recent protests led by Khan, the populist cricketer-turned-politician, and Qadri, a Pakistani-Canadian cleric and soapbox orator.
During this time, the owners of Pakistani media powerhouses -- namely ARY News, the Express Media Group, and Dunya News -- received instructions from the military establishment to support the "dissenting" leaders and their sit-ins. The military was using the media to add muscle and might to the anti-government movement in an attempt to cut Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif down to size.

The media obliged.

At the Express Media Group, anything related to Khan and Qadri were inexorably the lead stories on the front page or the hourly news bulletin. I witnessed polls showing support for Sharif being censored, while news stories on the misconduct of the protesters, along with any evidence that support among the protestors for Khan and Qadri was dwindling, were axed. While the BBC was publishing stories about how Qadri's protesters were allegedly being paid and Dawn, the leading English-language Pakistani newspaper -- and the Express Tribune's main competitor -- was writing powerful editorials about the military's role in the political crisis, we were making sure nothing negative about them went to print.
Day after day, my national editor told me about how he received frantic telephone calls late in the evening about what the lead story should be for the next day and what angle the article should take. First, we were told to focus on Khan. "Take this as Imran's top quote," "This should be in the headline," "Take a bigger picture of him" were the specific directives given by the CEO. Shortly after, the news group's owner was agitated that the newspaper had not been focusing enough on Qadri. We later found out that the military establishment was supporting the two leaders equally and the media was expected to do the same.
In their professional capacities, the editor and desk editors tried to put up a fight: they allowed some columns against the protests slip through; they did not extend the restrictions to publish against Khan and Qadri to the Web version of the newspaper; and they encouraged reporters to focus on the paper's strengths, such as investigative and research-based reports. However, it was difficult for the staff to keep its spirits high with the CEO's interference and his readiness to abide by the establishment's instructions. To be sure, the dictates were never given to the senior editorial staff, of which I was a part, directly. They were instead relayed to the editor or the national editor (who heads the main National Desk) via the CEO and then forwarded to us.
People often speculate about the media-military collusion in Pakistan, but in the instance of the current political standoff in the federal capital, as well as the Geo News controversy -- where the establishment was seen resorting to extreme methods, such as forcing cable operators to suspend Geo's transmission and impelling competing media houses to publish news stories against Geo, to curtail the broadcast of the largest and most-watched television channel for accusing then-ISI chief Zaheer-ul-Islam of being behind the gun attack on Hamid Mir, its most-popular anchor -- the media and the military worked hand-in-hand.
In most cases, it is common knowledge that the heavyweight broadcast anchors have strong ties to members of the military establishment, and they personally take direct instructions that are then conveyed to the owners of their respective media groups. This bias is often reflected in their coverage.
The anchors not only indulge in inaccurate reporting, but also shape political discourse against the democratically elected government and even the efficacy of democracy itself. Former Pakistani government officials have corroborated this by narrating their experience. One senior official told me: "Television anchors receive funds from the military establishment, if not the civilian Ministry of Information and Broadcasting. Today, all the Pakistani intelligence agencies and the military have media departments that ostensibly only disseminate background information and press briefings, but are actually guiding and managing discourses and the national narrative."
And this narrative is pro-army. Consider one example in particular.
On Aug. 31, when Khan's and Qadri's protesters had stormed the Parliament's gates, Mubasher Lucman, a television anchor for ARY News -- now the most-watched TV channel in Pakistan after Geo's transmission was illegally suspended -- saluted the army during a live broadcast and invited the military to take over "and save the protesters and the country." Earlier on Aug. 25, he welcomed the "sound of boots" (a reference to the military), as he had no sympathy for corrupt politicians who looted the country.
As if this was not enough, Lucman and his fellow anchors at ARY, some of whom are known to have strong ties to the army and the ISI, also made unverified claims on live television that seven protesters had been killed by riot police in the ensuing clash.
(It was reported by other news outlets that three people had died, one by accident.) Moreover, when Javed Hashmi, the estranged president of Khan's Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf (PTI) party, came out in public on Sep. 1 to reveal how Khan was banking on the military and the judiciary to end Sharif's government, Lucman slammed Hashmi, while his fellow anchor, Fawad Chaudhry, insisted that Hashmi had been "planted in [the] PTI" by the prime minister's closest aides.
Hashmi, who is known for his principled politics and who has been tortured and imprisoned by the military over the years, made the claims about Khan in a press conference where he revealed that: "Imran Khan said we cannot move forward without the army...He told us that he has settled all the matters; there will be elections in September."
Soon after this, we at the Express Tribune were instructed by the military to highlight statements released by the army's Inter-Services Public Relations office about how it was not a party to the crisis. When the military was on the defensive, issuing rebuttals to Hashmi's "revelations," we saw the instructions lessen and the powerful institution backing off. Yet media discourse throughout Pakistan's history has been influenced by the military, the most powerful institution in the country, or, in a few cases, has been strong-armed and intimidated by civilian heads of state until they were ousted by the military. There is a structural bias against democratic institutions and elected officials in Pakistan, and such a discourse has the not-unintentional effect of making the military seem like a better alternative, thereby reinforcing the notion that democracy does not work.
Media owners seem to "choose" the military establishment as it has been the most potent force and the only constant in Pakistan's polity. The institutional context of the country's power structure and patronage politics compels organizations and individuals to be a part of the system, which begins and ends with the military and its premier intelligence agency, the ISI. Abiding by the system without asking questions is rewarded. But even in a country with a deeply problematic history, the intensity of the recent interference is shocking.
Before the current political standoff, the establishment was dictating headlines and editorial policies during Sharif's trip to India for the inauguration of his counterpart, Narendra Modi, on May 26. While working at the Express Tribune, I was instructed to change the lead story on the Sharif-Modi meeting to give it a negative tint, concentrating on how the Indian prime minister was not welcoming as he focused on security issues. The phrase "show-cause" had to be inserted in the headline, which was a direct order from the CEO, who was getting instructions from the military.
To be sure, the Express Media Group and its staff have been attacked several times during the past year for raising sensitive issues. And here too it tried to balance the military-sponsored anti-government slant by giving room to other opinions in the form of editorials and separate stories. But it also had to survive in a system where the military dominates every aspect of public life. It is a tough choice as the military refuses to protect the country's journalists, even as the media continues to safeguard the military's image and ostensible apolitical status.
Neha Ansari worked as a senior sub-editor and shift-in-charge at the Express Tribune's national desk in Karachi, Pakistan from 2013 to 2014. She is now a visiting researcher at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington, D.C.

Not Fit to Print: An Insider Account of Pakistani Censorship
 
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Yeah, It was not hard to guess. But whoever said this on PDF and pretty much elsewhere was lynched by the IK mob. And their one excuse (which no longer holds any merit whatsoever) has consistently been that IK is somehow better than any one else right now.

I would very much like to know how is that excuse still sustainable? Should there not be an iota of shame for PTI apologists when they talk of constitution while their hero has been actively soliciting support from nondemocratic and manipulative forces? Seeing how IK has been used to cut down NS to size should really show how easy it is to use him. I would rather supporrt glacial NS over blundering IK just because one side represents a bid for power through flawed system, while the other represents a system damaging idiocy.

It is a matter of shame for me that I am compelled to support NS just because IK is just so power-mad and incompetent as a politician. I hope some other, more credible, choice emerges within next few years.
 
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It is a matter of shame for me that I am compelled to support NS just because IK is just so power-mad and incompetent as a politician. I hope some other, more credible, choice emerges within next few years.
Then I guess, you should come up with some suggestions on how competent and powerful current NS is. Japanese PM just resigned because he failed to deliver economically in an advanced country like Japan, while NS, that you are forced to support, can't resign and announce new elections when almost entire nation is chanting 'Go Nawaz Go' for months. Does this mean IK is power hungry or NS because he desperately wants to protect his rigged mandate for full 5 years? Japanese premier resigned in order to get popular mandate on his Abenomics, why can't NS do the same if opposition is questioning his mandate publicly?
 
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Then I guess, you should come up with some suggestions on how competent and powerful current NS is. Japanese PM just resigned because he failed to deliver economically in an advanced country like Japan, while NS, that you are forced to support, can't resign and announce new elections when almost entire nation is chanting 'Go Nawaz Go' for months. Does this mean IK is power hungry or NS because he desperately wants to protect his rigged mandate for full 5 years? Japanese premier resigned in order to get popular mandate on his Abenomics, why can't NS do the same if opposition is questioning his mandate publicly?
Cause Japanese pm is a man of honour..while mr. ns..well you know...baigharathon ka koyie level nahein hota.
 
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Cause Japanese pm is a man of honour..while mr. ns..well you know...baigharathon ka koyie level nahein hota.
Look, I have no disrespect for people who criticize or outright hate IK for what he says / do. IK is just a human being and like every human he has his personal weaknesses like his
  • illegitimate child without marriage
  • out of control temper
  • abusive and derogatory remarks about various Pakistani politicians, judges, army generals, media personnels, ethnicities etc etc.
He is not a saint, wali, or a man of ultimate vertue by any means. Yet one cannot say he is
  • corrupt financially, economically like Nawaz / Zardari and co
  • tax-evader like 70+ % of rigged parliamentarians
  • deliberately breaking his promises for personal gains
  • involved in illegal wealth confiscation by money laundering and so on
IK is financially, economically a clean slate. And Pakistan is currently in a financial, economic mess because we are deliberately ruled by the likes of Zardaris, Sharifs both corrupt billionaires and richest Pakistanis who time and again abuse their political rule to get even richer. Its an open secret how clean Sharif and Zardaris are, when both have tons of cases involving corruption both here in Pakistan and other countries. While IK has not a single case involving corruption despite his party ruling in KPK for more than 18 months. That is real change. First time PPP got power after Zia's demise, their government was dismissed on charges of widespread corruption which was done by none other than Zardari.
 
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Then I guess, you should come up with some suggestions on how competent and powerful current NS is. Japanese PM just resigned because he failed to deliver economically in an advanced country like Japan, while NS, that you are forced to support, can't resign and announce new elections when almost entire nation is chanting 'Go Nawaz Go' for months. Does this mean IK is power hungry or NS because he desperately wants to protect his rigged mandate for full 5 years? Japanese premier resigned in order to get popular mandate on his Abenomics, why can't NS do the same if opposition is questioning his mandate publicly?
I remember Ik resigned after defeat in 1987 world cup so a dummy played in 1992 world cup as a captain.
 
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ARY, Samma, and Express,

typical armed twisters, and think they are God Fathers.
 
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Look, I have no disrespect for people who criticize or outright hate IK for what he says / do. IK is just a human being and like every human he has his personal weaknesses like his
  • illegitimate child without marriage
  • out of control temper
  • abusive and derogatory remarks about various Pakistani politicians, judges, army generals, media personnels, ethnicities etc etc.
He is not a saint, wali, or a man of ultimate vertue by any means. Yet one cannot say he is
  • corrupt financially, economically like Nawaz / Zardari and co
  • tax-evader like 70+ % of rigged parliamentarians
  • deliberately breaking his promises for personal gains
  • involved in illegal wealth confiscation by money laundering and so on
IK is financially, economically a clean slate. And Pakistan is currently in a financial, economic mess because we are deliberately ruled by the likes of Zardaris, Sharifs both corrupt billionaires and richest Pakistanis who time and again abuse their political rule to get even richer. Its an open secret how clean Sharif and Zardaris are, when both have tons of cases involving corruption both here in Pakistan and other countries. While IK has not a single case involving corruption despite his party ruling in KPK for more than 18 months. That is real change. First time PPP got power after Zia's demise, their government was dismissed on charges of widespread corruption which was done by none other than Zardari.
Ohh please... current PTI has been part of other parties, its just you guys who think when someone joined PTI is clean.

Even imran khan isnt clean as you are making out of him, his purchase and extension of bani galla house itself is doubtfull, his earning, money for dharana is still a mistery. He is here since general pasha on signal of western powers bring him to islamabad. Even this thread is very example of what he is. How he is working on bringing down Pakistani government. I can bet, if today General Raheel confirms no support for PTI, then Imran will put allegation on him.

Imran Khan is propaganda machine , is a liar, Mr. U Turn Master, has sympathy for anti Pakistan elements like TTP. He encourage his followers for voilence, and then come and show victomization.

He is also not a saint as you are making up.
 
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Much as we may wish to imagine or pretend, Pakistan is not Japan.

This should not be just another this vs thst thread, though my post does seem to lead in that direction.

The basic point the OP article makes is not about relative merits / demerits of IK and NS. Its about how weak is our system, how it is undermined by certain quarters, and how our politicians undermine it for mirage of self-interest. This is our central problem. IK vs NS is just a temporary phase. Any who focus on this thing are short-sighted. Just as IK has been made to circumscribe NS, someone else would be used against IK. The stupidity / expediency of those who fail to see this is the real tragedy. This is how IK lost the plot. That is why he feels compelled to react to his critics.

One needs to put aside comfy and self-seving constructs to see the big picture. One needs to wake up.

Most of IK's critics do not support NS. They are exasperated with IK's idiocy. He probably thinks that he can have a better go at generals once he is in power, but he is just naive like his supporters.
 
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I remember Ik resigned after defeat in 1987 world cup so a dummy played in 1992 world cup as a captain.
So how did he win? Blind luck? Maybe Shaukat Khanum Hospital project's success was blind luck too as well as Naml University College, both run on donations because people are willing to pay to an honest person who they can trust. People won't pay a penny to corrupt people like Zardari / Nawaz.

Even imran khan isnt clean as you are making out of him, his purchase and extension of bani galla house itself is doubtfull, his earning, money for dharana is still a mistery. He is here since general pasha on signal of western powers bring him to islamabad. Even this thread is very example of what he is. How he is working on bringing down Pakistani government. I can bet, if today General Raheel confirms no support for PTI, then Imran will put allegation on him.
IK's purchase of his real estate at Bani Gala is a mystery because people like you never watch IK speeches / interviews. He has time and again given full details of how he purchased that parcel of land by selling his flat he purchased in London in 1983 from cricket money. Any idea how Nawaz made his castle in Raiwand and from what money? :D
Money for dharna is not a mystery more as overseas pakistanis raised at least 10 crores in few weeks for this dharna as funds were dwindling. Btw, is General Raheel fighting for free and fair election system in Pakistan or IK? :D

Imran Khan is propaganda machine , is a liar, Mr. U Turn Master, has sympathy for anti Pakistan elements like TTP. He encourage his followers for voilence, and then come and show victomization.
BS. He didn't support Taliban just because he propagated for political settlement between various militant groups!

He is also not a saint as you are making up.
LOL. I just wrote in the post above that he is no saint, yet you just wrote that I was making it like if he was a saint :D

Much as we may wish to imagine or pretend, Pakistan is not Japan.
So what is democracy then? Japan or Pakistan? We cannot call Pakistani government democratic when our leaders never follow international democratic standards but consistently behave like civilian dictators.

This is our central problem. IK vs NS is just a temporary phase. Any who focus on this thing are short-sighted. Just as IK has been made to circumscribe NS, someone else would be used against IK. The stupidity / expediency of those who fail to see this is the real tragedy. This is how IK lost the plot. That is why he feels compelled to react to his critics.
IK's criticism of NS who put his entire family on top political posts as a acting dynastic nepotic leader is perfectly valid. I am still amazed why many Pakistanis cannot see it through and they are perfectly happy with NS family rule of their country for the third time while believing it as "democracy".

One needs to put aside comfy and self-seving constructs to see the big picture. One needs to wake up.
Yes, many Pakistanis need to wake up from current political status quo, no doubt.

Most of IK's critics do not support NS. They are exasperated with IK's idiocy. He probably thinks that he can have a better go at generals once he is in power, but he is just naive like his supporters.
Generals are pakistanis too. They will still control Pakistan's foreign policy like current government, even when IK is in power, although he would have more say in decisions as he would have legit mandate unlike current rigged one.
 
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So how did he win? Blind luck? Maybe Shaukat Khanum Hospital project's success was blind luck too as well as Naml University College, both run on donations because people are willing to pay to an honest person who they can trust. People won't pay a penny to corrupt people like Zardari / Nawaz.

I answered your question of resign that what we expecting level of ethics from others but what is our example.(also see asset and tax declaration of IK it may be better then NS/Zardari but not honest approach which IK is claiming).

Where credit is due to credit is given There is no doubt about SKH and NAML etc.
Edhi, Aukhwat and lot of others are good examples in our society that is hope for Pakistan.
I also can not neglect Chaudri brothers orphan house( for girls), Sharif welfare trust( that started before NS came in politics) etc
 
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Quick facts:
1- lakhanis (owners of express) have a history of being the mistress of highest bidder.
2-Mir Shakeel has the attitude of media king and taking pangas with other media groups and marginalizing. Plus the JS connection.
3-Duniya well Mian amir is famously known as a "whore with a beard". His money making machine was fueled by chaudries and to date he remains liya to their cause.
4-ARY' Sallu Mian always run a rivalry with Geo and is now strongly backed by AKD (an opponent of Geo).
5-Capital TV is owned by zardari.
The only true independent media outlet is dawn followed by aaj.
 
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DAWN news is owned by an IRANIAN THUG known as ABDULLAH HUSSAIN HAROON ZARDARIS former representative 2 U.N. This IRANIAN THUG ABDULLAH HUSSAIN HAROON who is of IRANIAN ORIGIN from ISFAHAN is doing propoganda against GOVERNMENT OF NAWAZ SHARIF bc NAWAZ SHARIF has kept PAKISTANS interests FIRST by not importing an EXPENSIVE GAS from IRAN A BACK STABBING NATION
 
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DAWN news is owned by an IRANIAN THUG known as ABDULLAH HUSSAIN HAROON ZARDARIS former representative 2 U.N. This IRANIAN THUG ABDULLAH HUSSAIN HAROON who is of IRANIAN ORIGIN from ISFAHAN is doing propoganda against GOVERNMENT OF NAWAZ SHARIF bc NAWAZ SHARIF has kept PAKISTANS interests FIRST by not importing an EXPENSIVE GAS from IRAN A BACK STABBING NATION

Share some of that EXPENSIVE GAS with me
 
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