RSF urges CW Secretary-General to intervene | Pakistan Press Foundation (PPF)

Pakistan Press Foundation

RSF urges CW Secretary-General to intervene

Reporters Without Borders (Reporters sans frontières) is calling on Commonwealth Secretary-General Don McKinnon, to intervene with Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf and Prime Minister Mir Zafarullah Khan Jamali on behalf of four jailed journalists.

The call follows the Commonwealth’s May 22 decision to re-admit Pakistan, five years after it was suspended following the military coup that brought General Musharraf to power in 1999.

The organization pointed out that press freedom violations have increased in recent months. It hoped that Pakistan¹s re-entry to the Commonwealth could lead to real human rights improvements, particularly the release of journalists behind bars, along with the acquittal of Khawar Mehdi Rizvi, who is at risk of a life sentence.

The Pakistani authorities have secretly held Sami Yousafzai, of the US magazine Newsweek, since April 21, 2004. The authorities have not confirmed his arrest and there is still no news of his taxi driver, Mohamed Salim. Reporters Without Borders fears that Sami Yousafzai could be tried under the special Frontier Crimes Regulations, under which he is unlikely to get a fair trial.

Former letters page editor on The Frontier Post, Munawar Mohsin, was sentenced to life imprisonment by the High Court in the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) on July 8, 2003, for selecting and publishing a letter that allegedly insulted the Prophet Muhammad (Peace Be Upon Him) and was therefore blasphemous and a violation of the criminal code. Mohsin was arrested in Peshawar on January 29, 2001, the same day that the offending letter appeared in the newspaper, signed by someone identified as Ben Dzec.

On August 12, 2003, Rasheed Azam, journalist on local publications Intikhab and Asap and a human rights activist in south-western Baluchistan province was arrested for distributing posters showing a soldier beating young demonstrators. During the police investigation, reference was also made to his articles criticizing federal policy towards Baluchistan and he was reportedly beaten in the course of interrogation sessions.

Since April 1999, Rehmat Shah Afridi, former editor of the dailies The Frontier Post and Maidan, has been held in harsh conditions. He was sentenced to death in June 2001, for drug-trafficking and possession. He has always proclaimed his innocence. The Lahore High Court on May 20, 2004 condemned police destruction of key material evidence under which Afridi was convicted, confirming that the journalist was the victim of Anti-Narcotics Force (ANF) revenge for his exposure of the US-financed body¹s abuse of power and corruption. He was tortured following his arrest and placed in the death row in Kot Lakhpat prison in Lahore (in Punjab province). Until recently, he was never let out of his cell and had no mattress.

Another Pakistani journalist, Khawar Mehdi Rizvi, who worked for the French weekly L’Express, was held in secret by the military for several weeks. He was released from prison in Quetta on March 29, 2004 by order of the local anti-terrorist court, though he will be on bail and must still appear in court to face charges of conspiracy and sedition. He was arrested with two journalists on December 16, 2003 in Karachi just after completing a report on Taliban groups at the border with Afghanistan.

Reporters Without Borders has also sent the top Commonwealth official a copy of the Pakistan chapter of its 2003 annual report, that details 12 arrests, 27 assaults and at least six threats against journalists. The organization did also highlight some improvements, particularly the emergence in Pakistan of private television channels.
Source: RSF
Date:5/25/2004