"CPJ is extremely worried about any signs of government interference with the free press in Pakistan," said CPJ executive director Ann Cooper. "The Pakistani press has been one of the few institutions strong enough to help check the military government."
Sehbai distributed a copy of a letter from Rehman along with his resignation letter, both of which were obtained by the Reuters news agency. Rehman's letter held Sehbai responsible for an article that "was perceived to be damaging to our national interest and elicited [the] severe reaction of the government," according to Reuters.
Sehbai said in his resignation letter that the article in question was one that appeared on February 17, authored by Kamran Khan, which concerned the prime suspect in the abduction of slain Wall Street Journal Reporter Daniel Pearl. In the article, Khan, who also reports for The Washington Post, wrote that Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh had told investigators he was also involved in the December 13 suicide squad attack on the Indian Parliament. India blamed Pakistan-backed militants for the attack, leading to escalating tensions between the two countries and the looming threat of war on the subcontinent.
The government stopped all advertising in The News, after the story appeared and intensified pressure on the newspaper's staff, according to Sehbai.
Rehman did not comment on the allegations.
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