Article 19 – Pakistan Freedom of Expression Monitor http://pakistanfoemonitor.org News with beliefs, thoughts, ideas, and emotions Fri, 29 May 2015 12:31:30 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.1.6 216189435 Media commission case: ‘Judiciary, army cannot be criticised despite freedom of expression’ http://pakistanfoemonitor.org/media-commission-case-judiciary-army-cannot-be-criticised-despite-freedom-of-expression/ Fri, 29 May 2015 12:31:30 +0000 http://www.pakistanpressfoundation.org/?p=79929 Media commission case: ‘Judiciary, army cannot be criticised despite freedom of expression’ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court observed on Thursday that million of rupees are beings spent on the Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority (PEMRA) but their details are not being furnished in the court. A 2-member bench of the apex court presided over by Justice Jawwad S Khawaja took up the media commission case for hearing. During […]

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ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court observed on Thursday that million of rupees are beings spent on the Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority (PEMRA) but their details are not being furnished in the court.

A 2-member bench of the apex court presided over by Justice Jawwad S Khawaja took up the media commission case for hearing.

During the hearing, Justice Jawwad S Khawaja remarked that freedom of expression is there under Article 19 of the Constitution but the judiciary and armed forces cannot be criticised. He directed PEMRA to upload all the details on its website. He remarked that people should be informed about the details from July 2012 to-date.

The Information Ministry filed a report in the Supreme Court (SC) in the media commission case. The PEMRA chairman and other parties appeared before the court. PEMRA told the court that 17,500 complaints were received and action was taken on 17,208 complaints and action has yet to be taken on 248 complaints.

The deputy attorney general while presenting the report from the Information Ministry told the court that Senate approved the journalists’ code of conduct and now this is lying with a committee. He said the Pakistan Broadcasting Association (PBA) should be heard in the case. The information secretary told the court that PBA attended the first meeting and said it would not accept the code of conduct for journalists framed by the committee.

Justice Jawwad S Khawaja remarked, “Should we send invitations if someone does not come. Issuing warrants is a wrong thing. See the old order. Who represented PBA?” The information secretary told that Shakil Masud was PBA chairman at that time. Justice Jawwad remarked, “Did PBA express reservations over the code of conduct for journalists?” The information secretary said PEMRA has its own code of conduct but it is not following the same in letter and spirit. Justice Jawwad remarked, “Article 19 gives freedom of expression. Criticism on judiciary and army is banned but the relevant laws are not being implemented.”

The court issued notices to the president and other office bearers of Pakistan Broadcasting Association (PBA) and sought reply from them. Special Advisor to Prime Minister Irfan Siddiqui has also been summoned to tell the court about the details of the committee constituted by the prime minister. The hearing of the case was adjourned till June 2.

Daily Times

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GB court verdict threat to press freedom http://pakistanfoemonitor.org/gb-court-verdict-threat-press-freedom/ http://pakistanfoemonitor.org/gb-court-verdict-threat-press-freedom/#respond Sat, 29 Nov 2014 07:30:54 +0000 http://pakistanfoemonitor.org/?p=4751 Continue reading "GB court verdict threat to press freedom"

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KARACHI: The president of the Council of Pakistan News­paper Editors (CPNE), Mujibur Rehman Shami, and the president of the All Pakistan Newspapers Society (APNS), Hameed Haroon, have, in a joint statement, expressed dismay at what they called unlawful conviction of Mir Shakeel ur Rehman, the Editor-in-Chief of the Jang-Geo media group and associated media persons, by an anti-terrorism court in Gilgit-Baltistan.

They said that the conviction was incompatible with press freedoms enshrined in Article 19 of the Constitution and that the Gilgit-Baltistan (Empowerment & Self-Governance) Order, 2009 under which the judicature of that territory had been set up, was violative of the fundamental rights guaranteed to all Pakistani citizens in the Constitution. They said: “The unlawful conviction of media persons in Gilgit-Baltistan constitutes a major threat to the existence of a free press throughout the country.”

The joint statement issued on Friday further said that whereas some fundamental rights had been conferred under the controversial order, two major fundamental rights enjoyed by citizens of Pakistan under the 1973 Constitution were notably missing from it — the fundamental rights enshrined in Articles 10A and 13 of the Constitution.

CPNE, APNS urge PM to take notice of ‘unlawful conviction’

The statement pointed out that Article 10A provides that in any criminal charge, a person shall be entitled to a fair trial and due process and Article 13 guarantees that “no person shall be prosecuted for the same offence more than once”.

“Thus, if citizens of Pakistan not resident or not even physically present in the territory, were to be transported for trial from Pakistan to Gilgit-Baltistan for alleged offences, such persons would be denied two important fundamental rights.”

The presidents of CPNE and APNS have urged the prime minister to take immediate notice of the ‘unacceptable and anomalous’ situation by appropriately modifying the Order 2009. “Under Article 31 of this controversial order, the executive authority of the Government of Gilgit-Baltistan must be exercised to secure compliance with Pakistan laws, and this is a process that must be initiated immediately.”

Under Article 34 of the order, the prime minister has the power to remit, suspend or commute any sentence passed by any court or tribunal of Gilgit-Baltistan.

The statement said that the prime minister “must exercise his power to dispose of the sentence by the anti-terrorism court in Gilgit-Baltistan. Otherwise, Pakis­­tani journalists would always remain in fear of being dragged into criminal proceedings by a flawed dispensation in Gilgit-Baltistan on the flimsiest of pretexts — that their reportage has also been disseminated in Gilgit-Baltistan.

Dawn

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UN Secretary General must recognise the ‘Right to Know’ in his Post-2015 report http://pakistanfoemonitor.org/un-secretary-general-must-recognise-right-know-post-2015-report/ http://pakistanfoemonitor.org/un-secretary-general-must-recognise-right-know-post-2015-report/#respond Mon, 29 Sep 2014 13:51:55 +0000 http://pakistanfoemonitor.org/?p=4696 Continue reading "UN Secretary General must recognise the ‘Right to Know’ in his Post-2015 report"

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His Excellency Ban Ki-moon
Secretary General of the United Nations
United Nations Headquarters
New York, NY 10017

CC: Amina J. Mohammed, Assistant Secretary General

Dear Mr. Secretary General,

We write to you as a coalition of civil society organisations committed to sustainable development, to urge you to highlight the importance of the right to information, free media, and the protection of civil society organisations’ ability to organise and engage in your upcoming stocktaking report on the Sustainable Development Goals to the General Assembly.

We welcome your recent announcement on the creation of an Independent Expert Advisory Group on the Data Revolution for Sustainable Development. However, as experts and practitioners in the field, we feel strongly that the data revolution cannot succeed without substantial improvement in the openness of governments to their people and an improved and enabling environment for civic space that allow individuals, civil society and communities to know, speak, engage and operate freely. To achieve this, the rights to freedom of information, free media, freedom of association, and freedom of peaceful assembly must be fully recognised and enabled.

The importance of these rights has been recognised in the Millennium Declaration, the Rio+ 20 declaration and numerous UN papers. These rights are also highlighted in the report of the High Level Panel of Eminent Persons and in the recommendations of the Open Working Group, both of which recommended that access to information and the protection of fundamental freedoms be included as targets. However, even with the crucial role these rights play in development, they are largely unincorporated in currently agreed development mechanisms and were conspicuous by their absence in the Millennium Development Goals.

As you acknowledged in your “Freedom Lecture” speech last year at the University of Leiden, civil society is under increasing pressure: journalists and human rights defenders are imprisoned; internet and media outlets are shut down; and peaceful protests are banned. These issues need to be addressed as part of the SDGs or they will continue to hinder development progress and the data revolution will be restricted to the status quo of limited and unreliable information by the few, for the few, instead of access to information by everyone, for everyone, and the ability to act upon it.

Mr. Secretary General, today is globally recognised as “Right to Know Day”. Governments and civil society organisations around the world will celebrate the progress made so far to ensure everyone is empowered to have greater control over their lives by better knowing how governments operate. Please take the time today to ensure these rights are not forgotten in the SDGs.

Thank you for your consideration. If your office wishes to discuss this further, please contact us.

Yours sincerely,

ARTICLE 19
Access Info Europe
Accun pour la Culture Numérique
Action 2015 National team-Sri Lanka
Active Remedy Ltd
Adevarul (The Truth)
Africa Freedom of Information Centre
Albanian Media Institute
Amnesty International
Arlan
Asociación Gestión Salud Población
Association Al Bawsala
Association for Freedom of Thought and Expression
Association I Watch – Tunisia
Association Nigérienne des Femmes Diplômées
Association of Caribbean Media Workers
Association of Private Nature Reserves of Minas Gerais State
Association TANSA
Association Tunisienne de Soutien Aux Minorités
Association Tunisienne des Contrôleurs Publics
Association Vigilance pour la Démocratie et l’Etat Civique
Associazione Museo Energia
Bahrain Center for Human Rights
BBC Media Action
Belarusian Association of Journalists
CAFSO-WRAG for Development
Cambodian Center for Human Rights
Campaign2015+ International
Canadian Journalists for Free Expression
Caribbean Policy Development Centre
CEEweb for Biodiversity
Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility
Centre for Human Rights and Climate Change Research
Centre for Independent Journalism – Malaysia
Centre for Law and Democracy
Centre for Sustainable Development and Education in Africa
Centro de Reportes Informativos sobre Guatemala – CERIGUA
CF Sange Research Center
CIDAC
Civil Society Partnership for Development Effectiveness
COLLECTIF 24
Comité por la Libre Expresión – C-Libre
Comité Sénégalais des Droits de l’Homme
Corruption Watch UK
EDW ENERGIA
Federation of SUNFO Global Youth Forum
FEMNET – The African Women’s Development and Communication Network
Finnish NGDO platform to the EU
Finnish NGO Platform KEPA
Fondation Mohamed Belmufti Pour La Justice et Les Libertés
Foro de Periodismo Argentino
Foundation for Press Freedom – FLIP
Freedom Forum
Freedom House
Fundamedios – Andean Foundation for Media Observation and Study
GCAP Sri Lanka
Groupe AGORA pour les Droits de l’enfant et la paix (GRA-REDP)
Hong Kong Journalists Association
IMove 2015 Campaign Sri Lanka
Initiative for Freedom of Expression – Turkey
Institut panafricain pour la Citoyenneté, les Consommateurs et le Développement
Institute for Economic Research on Innovation
Institute for the Studies on Free Flow of Information
Instituto de Estudos de Direito e Cidadania
Instituto Internacional de Derecho y Medio Ambiente
Instituto o Direito por um Planeta Verde
Instituto Prensa y Sociedad de Venezuela
International Federation of Journalists, Asia Pacific
International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions
International Publishers Association
Interregional Union of Life Help for Mentally Handicapped Persons “Sail of Hope”
Journaliste en danger
Kikandwa Environmental Association
La Ligue Tunisienne des droits de l’Homme
Laboratório de Educação e Política Ambiental – OCA USP
Le Labo Démocratique
Ligue Africaine des blogueurs et activistes pour la démocratie
Ligue Sénégalaise des Droits de l’Homme
Maharat Foundation
Media Institute of Southern Africa
Media Watch
Media, Entertainment and Arts Alliance
MediaLink
Metamorphosis, Foundation for Internet and Society
Mujer y Sociedad
Mujeres Mundi
National Union of Somali Journalists
NGO Federation of Nepal
Observatoire Tunisien de l’Indépendance de la Magistrature
Organisation nationale des droits l’homme
Pacific Islands News Association
Pakistan Fisherfolk Forum
Pakistan Press Foundation
Palestinian Center for Development and Media freedoms (MADA)
PEN American Center
PraveenLata Sansthan
PRESSAFRIK
Pro Media
Public Association “Journalists”
Publish What You Fund
Ramfa “Rehomfa” Welfare Org
Rede Latinoamericana do Ministério Público Ambiental
Rencontre Africaine pour la Défense des Droits de l’Homme (RADDHO)
Reporters Without Borders
Request Initiative
Réseau des Organisations Féminines d’Afrique Francophone
Restless Development
Right to Information Coalition Ghana
RightsWay International
Second Chance foundation
Section Sénégalaise de la Société Internationale pour les Droits Humains
Southeast Asian Press Alliance
Southern Minas Gerais Institute for Nature Studies and Conservation
Southwest Freedom of Information Act Network
Sri Lanka United Nations Friendship Organization
Stichting Bakens Verzet (NGO Another Way)
Sunlight Foundation
Terra-1530
The Climate Reality Project Canada
Tobacco Free Association of Zambia
Tunisian Association for the Advancement of Science, Technology and Innovation
Union des Radios Associatives et Communautaires, Senegal
Union des Tunisiens Indépendants pour la Liberté
Unión Nacional de Instituciones para el Trabajo de Acción Social-UNITAS
Voice
West African Journalists Association
Whistleblower-Network Germany
World Association of Community Radio Broadcasters – AMARC
Zambia Heart and Stroke Foundation
Zo Indigenous Forum

ARTICLE 19

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