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Manipulating Pakistani minds!

MenInG

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IS it legal for a Pakistani state institution to maintain secret funds for influencing attitudes and opinions regarding individuals, groups, and political parties? Is there not a constitutional obligation to protect citizens from fake news, character assassinations, and hate campaigns?

Eighteen months ago the intrepid lawyer-activist Asma Jehangir filed a petition in the Supreme Court — so far without a hearing — wherein she challenged the state’s media behaviour on multiple counts. The petition identifies three media-related power centres: the information of ministry, privately owned media (overseen by Pemra) and ISPR. This public relations organisation, in contrast to private media, is apparently immune from all existing regulations.

According to her petition, ISPR’s media cell controls broadcasts in over 55 cities through its commercial FM-89.4 and FM-96 networks. It pleads that the extent of public resources committed to this purpose must be revealed. It further claims that a commercial licence was refused by Pemra in 2007 but revenues obtained from advertising, or taxes paid, are not available for scrutiny.

While PTV can be criticised it has stayed above the gutter-level broadcasts of some private TV channels.
Given that Article 19A of the Constitution asserts the public’s right to authentic and unbiased information, this petition conceivably carries weight. How the Supreme Court reacts to a matter where waters can easily be muddied in the name of national security will be interesting to watch. To be sure, no Pakistani law restricts ISPR’s role in the public domain. Equally no law prohibits disclosure of resources spent upon media outreach. But what has gone missing is transparency — a quality crucial to good governance.

In the furious race to grab the public mind, the military is but one of many contenders. Those who pursue some specific personal, financial, institutional, or ideological agenda know well that the media is indispensable to shaping minds and outlooks.

In 2007 Mullah Fazlullah, also known as Mullah Radio, had inspired the population of Swat valley through his mobile transmitter broadcasts supporting the Pakistani Taliban (TTP). His fiery sermons led to the cessation of such ‘un-Islamic’ activities as shaving beards, women leaving their houses without a guardian, singing, and education for girls. Soon the valley was drenched in blood.

Ditto for the gang wars in Karachi’s Lyari area, stoked by inflammatory local newspapers. These turf wars had raged since 2002 and claimed hundreds of lives yearly before grinding to an end in 2015. Earlier, gangs would transmit blood-dripping warnings and ultimatums through newspapers they controlled. Images of brutalised corpses adorned the front pages of rival papers such as Janbaz (which came to be known as ‘Don Akhbar’!), Anjam, Mahaz, etc.

Countless other examples also provide proof that disinformation and propaganda can reduce a society to bestial savagery. But the right lessons have apparently not been learned well enough.

The ongoing media campaign against a lawyer and civil rights activist, Jibran Nasir, by a well-known TV channel is a case in point. Owned by a company that sells fraudulent college degrees around the world, it is directing a series of extraordinarily vicious propaganda programmes against this young man. This campaign followed his appeal to the Supreme Court for justice in the Shahzeb Khan murder case. The confessed killer, Shahrukh Jatoi, had spent time in jail with the company’s owner and the two jailbirds are said to have developed a close rapport with each other.

I have watched these programmes and am appalled by their grossly uncivilised and defamatory nature. In another country such a channel would have been immediately shut down and the operators punished.
In one of these programme a fully masked man with a deep voice, Mr Qaum, alleges that Nasir works on a foreign agenda, is an enemy of Kashmiris, mocks Islam, and is a blasphemer — the latter because Nasir allegedly refuses to accept that the dead man’s family has the right to pardon the murderer, the son of a feudal lord. In fact Nasir vigorously refutes all these allegations including that of having challenged the religious notion of blood money. Of course, like Nasir, most Pakistanis are outraged that a murderer has escaped scot free just because he could buy his way out.

While PTV has often been criticised for uncritically carrying the state’s narrative, Pakistani private TV channels have taken broadcasting to a new low. Most channels only thinly mask the agenda of their owners or sponsors. Sadly, all are dismal copies of each other — not one stands out. There is little interest in issues such as climate change, global politics, science, or even culture. Instead the near exclusive focus is upon political entertainment — evening talk shows. In contrast to dramas and documentaries, these require no financial input or prior preparation.

The standard formula is to bring together different talking heads. The more abusive and aggressive the anchor or the guests, and the louder on-site reporters scream, the higher this drives ratings. Anchors do not permit the free flow of ideas; for the most part a scripted play is acted out. Several anchors have deliberately stoked violence against religious minorities and murders have sometimes followed their inflammatory statements hours or days later. Free from ethical pressures, they ruthlessly exploit social pathologies while suspending conscience and good sense.

While Pakistan has benefited from private TV to an extent, more has been lost than gained. Popular anchors have frequently given space and sympathy to murderers and terrorists, and broadcast every lie, rumour, and idiocy that could sell. You just have to mentally flip through some sickening images of past years: one stood outside Lal Masjid echoing the calls of the insurrectionists; another gloated over the Mumbai massacre; a third justified Malala Yousufzai’s shooting.

Gutter journalism on several Pakistani private TV channels has visibly reduced and degraded national cultural quality. It has heightened aggressive behaviour and rudeness in people’s daily interactions. While this is reversible, virtue will not descend from the skies. Instead, libel and defamation laws need to be vigorously enforced by the courts. Transparency of ownership, disclosure of financial information, respect for truth and evidence, and adherence to basic journalistic ethics must be insisted upon.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1385506/
 
Who cares about right or wrong. It works and those who can take advantage of it do so. The fact that our military has so much public support despite being a corrupt, nation looting, terrorist fostering, land grabbing pieces of trash speaks volumes to the effectiveness of ISPR's propaganda campaign and it will only intensify with media outlets like ARY, 92, PAK and especially Bol spreading their propaganda far and wide.
 
Who cares about right or wrong. It works and those who can take advantage of it do so. The fact that our military has so much public support despite being a corrupt, nation looting, terrorist fostering, land grabbing pieces of trash speaks volumes to the effectiveness of ISPR's propaganda campaign and it will only intensify with media outlets like ARY, 92, PAK and especially Bol spreading their propaganda far and wide.


Pakistani military owns the Pakistani state, it is just that many overseas Pakistanis neglect this fact and become a junooni and pray and shout/insult/abuse for Imran Khan. The thought process that anyone elected in Pakistan will have any real powers is delusional.
[MENTION=101697]LegendInzi[/MENTION] [MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION]
 
Pakistani military owns the Pakistani state, it is just that many overseas Pakistanis neglect this fact and become a junooni and pray and shout/insult/abuse for Imran Khan. The thought process that anyone elected in Pakistan will have any real powers is delusional.
[MENTION=101697]LegendInzi[/MENTION] [MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION]

Let us worry about it.
 
Pakistani military owns the Pakistani state, it is just that many overseas Pakistanis neglect this fact and become a junooni and pray and shout/insult/abuse for Imran Khan. The thought process that anyone elected in Pakistan will have any real powers is delusional.
[MENTION=101697]LegendInzi[/MENTION] [MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION]

No idea why you are trying to pin the blame for this on overseas Pakistanis, it's your country, you live in there, so ultimately you and the rest of your Pakistani kinsmen have to take responsibility for what goes on there.
 
No idea why you are trying to pin the blame for this on overseas Pakistanis, it's your country, you live in there, so ultimately you and the rest of your Pakistani kinsmen have to take responsibility for what goes on there.

Guy is Indian
 
Present proofs! All liberals rant with no proper proof; similar to Dr Shahid.

There have been entire libraries worth of material published on the subject. Maybe read some sometime? Also, be more specific. Proof of what? Corruption and land grabs? Read Ayesha Siddiqa or Hasan Askari Rizvi. Human rights violations? Read any one of human rights watch's country reports from the last 10 years. It's funny you mention Dr. Shahid considering his one big claim to fame is being the ultimate army groupie.
 
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Yeah, let's pretend the army does nothing so Indians can't talk.

Every government is corrupt, not a single government exist that isn't corrupt. Current system of ruling the world can't exist without corruption.
 
There have been entire libraries worth of material published on the subject. Maybe read some sometime? Also, be more specific. Proof of what? Corruption and land grabs? Read Ayesha Siddiqa or Hasan Askari Rizvi. Human rights violations? Read any one of human rights watch's country reports from the last 10 years. It's funny you mention Dr. Shahid considering his one big claim to fame is being the ultimate army groupie.

Every government is guilty of human right violation in some way and form domestically and internationally. In current system no government or army exist that has not violated rights of an individual.

Army is corrupt, but Pakistan is different.

But, here what I believe, Pakistani Army is not in mood to come into power or get rid of democratic government, but they are certainly in mood to get rid of old played out corrupt politician, and so far they have done great job to get rid of them systematically, Altaf gone, NS will be history, Zardari will never be PM or president.
 
Every government is corrupt, not a single government exist that isn't corrupt. Current system of ruling the world can't exist without corruption.
So we should give them a free pass because everyone else does it? Should we let Nawaz Noora and Zardari off the hook too then? Financial corruption isn't even the biggest issue with the army, its the land grabbing and interference in matters above their pay grade (foreign policy, economy, law enforcement) that are the real threats.
 
So we should give them a free pass because everyone else does it? Should we let Nawaz Noora and Zardari off the hook too then? Financial corruption isn't even the biggest issue with the army, its the land grabbing and interference in matters above their pay grade (foreign policy, economy, law enforcement) that are the real threats.

Never said that, everyone should be criticized.

Land grabbing? have they grabbed your property? How many were homeless because Army grabbed their land?

Every country foreign policy is determined by combine decision of every institution, Army is one of them.

Last time Army was in Karachi, Law and Order situation got better. I would take Army over Alta'f's thug any day.
 
Never said that, everyone should be criticized.

Land grabbing? have they grabbed your property? How many were homeless because Army grabbed their land?

Every country foreign policy is determined by combine decision of every institution, Army is one of them.

Last time Army was in Karachi, Law and Order situation got better. I would take Army over Alta'f's thug any day.

I'm from an army family (probably more member in the army than any other family in Peshawar) so no, my land was not grabbed but can you explain why they own almost a full one-fifth of all agricultural land in Pakistan ? Can you name one other country apart from Egypt and Burma where the military is the largest player in the economy?

As for how many are homeless, ask the guy in Okara whose crop was destroyed by the Army for questioning their business practices there or the thousands that have vanished from the face of the earth for exercising their constitutional right to ask questions of the military paid for by their money. I can imagine the hue and cry if known critics of PML-N or PPP started disappearing en masse?

Army is not "one of the institutions" that has a say in our foreign policy, army is the only institution that does. Anytime that has been challenged, certain media outlets start throwing around accusations of treachery (at India's behest - somehow every politician here is an Indian agent) and more recently, even blasphemy.
 
Guy is Indian

That makes his pointing fingers at overseas Pakistanis even more redundant. You get the govt you deserve, if the army has more clout than it should do, that is down to their popularity with the masses at home.
 
There should be only PTV and rest of the private channels needs to be shutdown. One of the worse things Musharraf has done is unleashing this huge mess of media which has left average Pakistani confused and apathetic. The more polarized a country, the lesser need of free media.

PTV, even if controlled by government, created a sense of optimism and unity among Pakistanis, I still remember the good old days back in 90s.
 
bol network continues to attack Jibran Nasir who stood for shazaib in the shahrukh jatoi case
 
First Mujahideen e Khatm e Nabooat trapped him and now this


<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Human rights activist, lawyer & an election candidate <a href="https://twitter.com/MJibranNasir?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@MJibranNasir</a> has been picked up by police in <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Karachi?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Karachi</a> . This is a terrifying video to watch in an increasingly chaotic pre election environment and it is completely unacceptable. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/FreeJibran?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#FreeJibran</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/JibranNasir?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#JibranNasir</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Pakistan?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Pakistan</a> <a href="https://t.co/Oq10ZadDO9">https://t.co/Oq10ZadDO9</a></p>— Sophia Saifi (@SophiaSaifi) <a href="https://twitter.com/SophiaSaifi/status/1013797266421960705?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 2, 2018</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Not only minds but anything and everything they can to achieve their goals and place their favorite parties and candidates ahead. A complete mockery of an election process.

The Aliens have captured the Land of the Cowards, Criminals and Corrupt. Here’s the proof.

The PMNL Prime Minister, Nawaz Sharif, was disqualified for life because he forgot to declare an insignificant income he had not received. Now ex-PMLN prime minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi has been felled because he declared an asset at cost price (as required by the FBR) rather than at market price (as demanded by a judge). The PMLN’s hard hitting spokesman Daniyal Aziz has also bitten the dust because he dared to challenge some controversial judicial decisions. Much the same treatment is likely to be meted out to Talal Chaudhry, another outspoken PMLN crusader. Indeed, we may expect PMLN ex-interior minister Ahsan Iqbal and a clutch of PMLN leaders to meet the same fate now or after the elections.

There’s more.

Nawaz and Mariam Sharif have been dragged to a NAB court for daily hearings in cases of alleged money laundering thirty years ago. Their lawyer’s pleas for due process have been all rubbished. Both must beg the court for leave to attend to a wife and mother’s terminal illness in a London hospital. Under the circumstances, how can one lead his party’s election campaign and another take the field on her own account?

There’s more.

NAB is summoning PMLN ex-Chief Minister Punjab Shahbaz Sharif and Railways Minister Saad Rafique every second day to answer a battery of questions. The ex-CM’s principal aide, Ahad Cheema, is languishing in a NAB prison even though the investigation process is still underway, an extraordinary departure from NAB rules. Fawad Hasan Fawad, the principal secretary to ex PM Nawaz Sharif, is also in the NAB dock and barred from leaving the country. Now NAB has arrested the PMLN’s popular nominee Qamarul Islam Raja without even an investigation, clearing the electoral field for PMLN rebel Chaudhry Nisar to romp home in style.

There’s more.

The Aliens are spurring “electable” horses to desert the PMLN and flock to “Independent” stables, most notably in Southern Punjab where they can be corralled and suitably branded at the right time after the elections.

There’s more.

Despite an upright interim prime minister like ex-CJP Nasir ul Mulk, much the same bias or discrimination is evident in the selection of various ministers, most notably highlighted by the last minute induction of a staunch PPPite and “samdhi” of the current CJP and a retired a self-righteous leader of The Aliens who had earlier been dismissed as defense secretary by a sitting prime minister for “gross misconduct, illegal action and creating misunderstandings between institutions”. The Punjab interim administration has veritably been stuffed with well-known anti-PMLN administrators and policemen. In Sindh, the ruling PPP and opposition MQM – which dutifully bow to every call of The Aliens— have conveniently banded together to choke the interim provincial government with hand-picked cronies. Balochistan’s “Independent” stables are already a scandal of the highest order.

There’s more.

The Aliens have also nudged various religious parties and radical groups to either band together (like the Muttahida Majlis i Amal) or field their own candidates to whittle away the conservative votes of the PMLN (like the Lashkar e Taiba led by Hafiz Saeed and the Tehreek I Labiaq Ya Rahool Allah led by Khadim Hussain Rizvi). The Labaiq, in particular, has become a favoured child of late – it was unleashed to destabilize the PMLN government earlier this year when it successfully obtained the resignation of the PMLN’s law minister, Zahid Hamid, and followed up by the attempted assassination of the interior minister, Ahsan Iqbal. Now, in an extraordinary move, the interim-Punjab government has lifted the ban on listed terrorist organisations like the Sipah i Sahaba and Ahle I Sunnat Wal Jamaat and unfrozen the assets of its leader Maulana Ahmad Ludhianvi . Earlier, Imran Khan’s KPK government had funded and made an electoral alliance with Maulana Samiul Haq’s Darul Uloom Jamia Haqqania Akora Khattak.

Clearly, all state institutions, political parties, social groups, religious organisations and civilian administrations across the country have fallen to The Aliens. A once-vibrant and independent media has been gagged or harnessed to do The Aliens’ bidding. Under the circumstances, it is a small miracle that, by and large, the PMLN is still standing behind a battered, bruised and beleaguered Nawaz Sharif. For how long, though, is the million-dollar question.

If, for whatever reason, Nawaz Sharif decides to stay away in London for the rest of the electoral season and beyond, it will mean that he has thrown in the towel and agreed a deal with The Aliens. In that case, the NAB trials and verdict will be delayed until after the elections when The Aliens have surveyed the landscape and devised a new framework of law and order with a new parties-asset base. But if Nawaz Sharif returns and pursues his campaign as vigorously as before,he will go to prison and his PMLN will be forcefully dealt a losing hand.


http://www.thefridaytimes.com/tft/the-aliens/
 
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