Headlines
  • After a temporary suspension, Emirates said the airline "will resume operations."
  • On Saturday, US President Donald Trump said that Iran will be "hit very hard" and that he was thinking about extending the strikes to other targets..
  • At least five ballistic missile launches from Iran have been detected by the Israelis since midnight.
  • Mehrabad Airport in Tehran is hit by strikes
  • The Prince Sultan Air Base was the target of a ballistic missile that Saudi Arabia's military intercepted and destroyed, according to the country's defense ministry.
  • Heavy gunfire on Friday injured three peacekeepers from the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon inside their base in southwest Lebanon.
  • To put an end to the bloodshed, UN Secretary-General António Guterres urged serious diplomatic negotiations..
  • In a social media post, President Trump said that "no deal" other than "unconditional surrender" will be with Iran.
  • Iran reportedly receives intelligence from Russia on US targets.

More Details

‘This Channel Is Currently Unavailable’: Pakistani TV Stations Taken Off The Air Amid State Crackdown

RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty

Frud Bezhan and Daud Khattak

This channel is currently unavailable due to a technical issue. Sorry for inconvenience.”

That was the abrupt English-language message seen by millions of viewers watching three Pakistani television channels — Abb Takk TV, 24 News, and Capital TV — when they were suddenly taken off the air on July 6.

The three private networks had broadcast a live press conference held by Maryam Nawaz, an opposition leader and the daughter of jailed former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, who was controversially removed from power in 2017 and has a long history of falling out with the country’s powerful military.

Nawaz, who received a suspended prison sentence on corruption charges, gave a press conference that featured a judge claiming he had been blackmailed into convicting the former premier.

Pakistani authorities said the channels were unavailable due to “technical issues.” But Reporters Without Borders (RSF) described the outage as an act of “brazen censorship.”

RSF said in a July 9 statement that the TV channels were “deliberately removed at the behest of the Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority (PEMRA), the all-powerful broadcast media regulator that takes its lead from the military establishment.”

The move came as Prime Minister Imran Khan’s government pledged to block any media coverage and interviews with politicians “who are convicts and under trial,” according to the Dawn newspaper.

The incident came as Pakistan’s free press finds itself under unprecedented pressure from the military — an institution that has an oversize role in domestic and foreign affairs in the South Asian country of some 212 million people.

The independent media has suffered a spate of blows in recent years.

Several veteran reporters in Pakistan have left journalism after being threatened; private Geo TV was forced off the air; authorities have disrupted the distribution of Dawn, Pakistan’s oldest English-language newspaper; and leading columnists have complained that stories deemed to be critical of the army are being rejected by outlets under pressure from the military.

Criticism of the army has long been seen as a red line for the media, with journalists and bloggers complaining of intimidation tactics including kidnappings, beatings, and even killings if they cross that line.

Aniqa Nisar, a Capital TV journalist, tweeted on July 8 that taking the three channels off the air “without reason, without notice” was “absurd,” adding the hashtag #JournalismIsNotACrime

https://twitter.com/AniqaNisar/status/1148253113234706438?s=19

Ameer Abbas, an anchor at the private Bol News, said it was an “inappropriate” and “shameful” way of regulating the media

Not Living In A Free Country’

On July 1, reporter Hamid Mir’s recorded interview with opposition politician and former President Asif Ali Zardari on Pakistan’s most popular TV station, Geo News, was suddenly cut short when screens went black. Zardari is facing corruption charges over a money-laundering case.

Veteran Pakistani journalist Hamid Mir: “Those who stopped [the interview] have no courage to accept publicly that they stopped it.”~Ahmed Shah Azami/RFE/RL

Geo News did not give a reason why it cut the interview just minutes after it began. But Mir tweeted shortly afterward that it was “easy to understand who stopped [the interview].”

“Those who stopped it have no courage to accept publicly that they stopped it,” he said.

“We are not living in a free country,” he said in another tweet.

Mir told RFE/RL that “my television management told me that they were under pressure to stop the [Zardari] interview,” adding that he believes “that this pressure could not be from the civilian government” and “there must be someone else behind all this.”

Geo TV and the military have been at odds since 2014, when Geo TV anchor and journalist Hamid Mir was shot in the port city of Karachi. Mir accused the military’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) spy agency of ordering the assassination attempt.

Geo TV publicly backed Mir’s claims, while the military denied any involvement.

“This utterly arbitrary interruption of programming bears the hallmarks of the military establishment, which is always quick to censor content it would probably dislike,” said Daniel Bastard, the head of RSF’s Asia-Pacific desk.

Former Pakistani journalist Mohammad Malick said in a tweet on July 1 that “free speech is hardly free anymore.” “Coercion may work in [the] short term but ultimately it consumes the perpetrator itself.”

“The country is under siege by its armed forces,” said British-Pakistani journalist and rights activist Gul Bukhari in a tweet on July 1.

Hashtag Hate

Meanwhile, a hashtag calling for the arrest of journalists became the top Twitter trend in Pakistan last week.

Pakistani Twitter users accompanied the #ArrestAntiPakjournalists hashtag with a composite photograph of prominent journalists and TV anchors, many known for their criticism of Khan’s governing Pakistan Tehrik-e Insaf (PTI) and the military establishment.

Media Matters for Democracy, an independent monitoring group in Pakistan, said the hashtag started trending on July 4 following a tweet from Team #IK Warriors (@Ik_Warriors).

The account announced the “launch” of the hashtag “#ArrestAntiPakJournalists” and called on followers to “grab the keyboard and start trending,” along with a picture of the journalists and anchors alleged to be “the members of pro-India, anti-Pak media groups.”

https://twitter.com/Ik_Warriors/status/1146659955136745472?s=19

Among the prominent independent journalists pictured was Mir.

Meanwhile, two reporters and a TV anchor known for their criticism of the government and the army were forced to deactivate their social-media accounts.

The Twitter accounts of reporters Umer Cheema and Azaz Syed as well as anchor Wajih Sani were no longer active. Cheema has more than 1 million followers on Twitter.

Bol News anchor Mureed Abbas and his friend were shot dead in the port city of Karachi on July 9. Authorities said the killings were over a personal dispute.

Deteriorating Press Freedom

The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) said in a report released in September that the climate for press freedom in Pakistan was deteriorating as the country’s army “quietly, but effectively” restricts reporting through “intimidation” and other means.

The report said journalists who push back or are overly critical of authorities are attacked, threatened, or arrested. The CPJ also said the Pakistani military, intelligence, and military-affiliated political groups are suspected in the killings of 22 reporters in the past decade.

Pakistan is ranked 142nd out of 180 countries in RSF’s 2019 World Press Freedom Index, three places lower than it was in 2018.

Copyright (c) 2019. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave NW, Ste 400, Washington DC 20036

Featured Image Courtesy: Facebook/ Pakistan TV Anchors

Related Article

Treatment of Ailing Independent Journalist in…

Independent journalist Le Huu Minh Tuan, who is serving 11 years for “conducting propaganda agains ...
June 26, 2025

Reporters’ Group Calls for Release of…

The Independent Myanmar Journalists Association is calling for the release of a reporter who was sen ...
May 2, 2025

Despite Yunus Govt Promises on Press…

Five months after the repressive Awami League government fell, with an interim administration preach ...
January 10, 2025

Analysts Say,Lack of Justice Makes Media…

Attacks on journalists happen with impunity in countries that are experiencing internal conflict or ...
November 6, 2024

Media Groups Demand Netanyahu be Held…

During his visit to Washington this week to address members of Congress and attend talks at the Whit ...
July 27, 2024

Investigative Journalist in Peru Weathers Physical…

A Peruvian investigative media outlet uncovered high-level corruption in the government. Threats and ...
July 18, 2024

Other Article

Pick of the Day

UN Permanent Representative of Iran Briefs…

Amir Saeid Iravani, Permanent Representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations, ...
March 7, 2026
Bizzare News

Malaysian Man Holds Record for Having…

Malaysian Prathab Muniandy has ten more teeth than the typical human. This indicates that he has the ...
March 6, 2026
Pet Corner

Identify the Dog Breed

Identify dog and cat breeds using pictures.ideal match for you.Consider about these facts before pur ...
Prevent Cyber Crime

Fileless Malware

A type of malicious software known as "fileless malware" infects a computer by using reliable apps. ...
Pick of the Day

UN Security Council Meets on Energy,…

Chris Wright, Secretary of Energy of the United States and President of the United Nations Security ...
Bizzare News

Just Before it Collapses, New Jersey…

A horrifying collapse happened minutes after four Jersey Shore police officers were captured on came ...
March 5, 2026

Top