Media organisations rejected proposed Pakistan Media Development Authority (PMDA)
APNS, CPNE, PFUJ, PBA and AEMEND declared new media authority draconian and against press freedom
The Pakistani media organisations including APNS, CPNE, PBA, PFUJ, AEMEND
rejected the proposed Media Development Authority and termed it an attack on
freedom of press. They have accused PTI government of trying to impose
state control over all segments of media through this draconian law.
The representatives
of various Pakistani media organizations rejected the PTI government’s
proposed Pakistan Media Development Authority (PMDA), describing it as a
“draconian law” that was against the freedom of press and expression.
In a joint
statement, representatives of the All Pakistan Newspaper Society (APNS),
Council of Press Editors (CPNE), Pakistan Broadcasters Association (PBA);
Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists (PFUJ), and Association of Electronic
Media Editors and News Directors (AEMEND) described the proposed legislation as
“unconstitutional,” and accused the government of trying to impose state
control to regulate all segments of media.
“The
representatives of the media organizations vehemently objected to the
proposed PMDA, as it appears to be aimed at subjugating the freedom of press
and expression,” it said, adding that it seemed to be aiming at tightening the
federal government’s control over the media. The proposed law, it stressed,
also “ignores the fact that print, electronic and social media are separate
entities, each with their own defined features.”
Urging a
joint meeting of the Senate and National Assembly on Information to reject the
proposed law “completely,” the statement added: “The move to bring [media]
under state control smacks of an authoritarian streak that should have no place
in democratically elected dispensation.”
The proposed
text of the PMDA became public in May—though denied as “fake” by Information
Minister Fawad Chaudhry—and seeks to replace all existing individual media
regulatory bodies with a centralized authority that regulates print, electronic
and digital media under one roof.
Independent
media watchdogs have already declared Pakistan as one of the most dangerous
countries in the world for journalists, with the country ranking 145 out of
180. Reporters without Borders, earlier this year, declared Prime Minister
Imran Khan a “predator” of press freedom, describing him as having “dictatorial
tendencies” and overseeing “brazen censorship” during the three years of his
administration.
The
statement also said that the proposed PMDA “appears to be aimed at subjugating
the freedom of press and expression.” Media organisations called the proposed
authority the Pakistan Media Destruction Authority.
PMDA is an
attempt to tighten the federal government’s control over the media from one
platform and ignores the fact that print, electronic, and social media are
separate entities, each with their own defined features, the statement added.
Representatives of media organisations also urged the joint meeting of the
lower and upper houses of parliament to reject the proposal in its entirety.
Insight247.news report
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