Sunday, October 29, 2017

Balochistan’s Journalists Sandwiched Between Militants and State as Newspapers Distribution Terminated




In Balochistan, local and national newspapers’ distribution has remained suspended for the consecutive two days after the banned militant organizations threatened journalists, imposing a ban on delivery. The newspapers hawkers and news agencies responsible for the distribution of copies have come under increasing attacks in the last two 24 hours.
The newspapers are being printed but people’s access to information has been stifled due to lack of distribution throughout the province. According to the reports, on Thursday afternoon a newspaper shop in Turbat has come under attack after the grenade attack on Hub Press Club on Wednesday night. The Pak News Agency’s office was targeted by a grenade as the agency continued to release the newspapers disregarding the banned outfits’ boycott.
Due to intermittent access to the internet in most parts of Balochistan, local newspapers are the only access to regional news. These newspapers include Intikhab, Eagle, Jasarat, Anjaam, Rehber, Bolan, Jang and Dawn which are dispatched from Karachi and Quetta to different areas of Balochistan. Sharif Baloch, a resident of Balochistan told Pak Voices, “Due to non-distribution of newspapers for two days, we are completely in the dark of the latest happenings and it looks like our contact has been cut off from the rest of the country.” Last week, the local media had received pamphlets from the militant outfits, warning them for ignoring their viewpoint. Expressing reservations on media coverage, it said, “The media is silent on ongoing military operation in Balochistan whereas our viewpoint has not been presented in the media for the past five months.”The militants had issued the deadline of October 24, asking the press to shut down the delivery of newspapers after which the supply was stopped in almost all cities of Balochistan, including Quetta and Gawadar. Hawker’s Association has also refused to distribute the newspapers after the attacks on the news agencies.
Talking to PakVoices, Nargis Baloch, a well-known journalist of Hub, an industrial town on the outskirts of Karachi where the Press Club also had been attacked, and the editor of Daily Intikhab said, “We are passing through a difficult situation, newspapers are being printed even after threats of militants but there are problems in distribution network because the hawkers and transporters have been terrified after a series of attacks.”
“The atmosphere of fear has arisen after the attack on the Hub press club,” Baloch said, adding, “Threatening email messages and warning letters to the journalists had been sent by the militants.”
“We are not in favor of coverage boycott of any organization but there is state’s pressure on the media,” Nargis Baloch told PakVoices. Alyas Khumbo, the president of the Hub Press Club and the chief editor of The Daily Bolan, speaking to PakVoices said, “A large number of journalists were present at the Hub Press Club when its back door was attacked by a grenade.” No one was injured in the attack. Even after the attack, Khumbo expressed his concern over the security arrangements at the press clubs, adding “Journalists are already oppressed, we are being tortured and many journalists have even dug their graves.”
The president of Gawadar Press Club, Bahram Baloch said, “The distribution has been stopped by the head offices of most newspapers after the attacks and hawkers have also refused to deliver papers after a grenade attack in Hub.” “The journalists of Balochistan have been neutral in reporting but the press clubs and journalists and newspapers have been made a scapegoat in a conflict between the militants and the state,” Bahram Baloch added.
He said, “Apart from Gwadar, distribution of newspapers have been closed in Pasni, Turbat, Panjgur and other areas of Makran Coast.” “In other cities of Balochistan, fear has grown among journalists and the Gawadar Press Club has limited its activities,” says Bahram.

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