For safety’s sake: New journalist safety rules in Pakistan

From a poster by the International Federation of Journalists and the Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists.

From a poster by the International Federation of Journalists and the Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists.

I got an early version of the Khyber Union of Journalists‘ (KhUJ) list of safety rules and tips for field reports around June 16, after the June 11 double bomb in a crowded market that killed two journalists in Peshawar. Yousaf Ali, KhUJ’s general secretary had forwarded the list. It was quickly drawn up after that very ugly incident in which five other journalists were injured–in all 36 people were killed. 

Arshad Aziz Malik, the KhUJ’s president, just sent a revised version. I’ve cut and pasted his message and the list below. It reflects the hard-won field experience of a lot of people covering news in one of the toughest beats in the world right now. I’m not sure I agree with all the recommendations, but read down that list and you can get a very real sense of just how bad things are getting in Peshawar, and for that matter the rest of Pakistan. Mazhar Abbas filed a blog for us on Friday underlining that point, called “Karachi might be more dangerous for media than FATA.”

And on July 6, the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) and the Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists (PFUJ) released a group of posters and brochures in Urdu and English for newsrooms. Frank Smyth, CPJ’s Washington representative and our journalist security coordinator, termed that list “short and sweet and sound”–high praise indeed.   

Even though the KhUJ, PFUJ, and IFJ have all drawn up safety guidelines because of a disintegrating security situation, it is reassuring to see Pakistani journalists taking the issue of their security into their own hands. Given what almost amounts to an onslaught against journalists in Pakistan from many different actors–the government, thugs from political groups, terrorist groups, abusive local feudal leaders, and politically connected warlords–and the near-perfect impunity with which the attacks take place, journalists have nowhere to turn but to themselves. The rest of civil society–the police, courts, special legislative committees, even special judicial inquiries–have not brought one perpetrator of an attack against journalists to justice since the case of American reporter Daniel Pearl of the Wall Street Journal, who was killed in 2002.

This is a point I’ve been making since CPJ met with President Asif Ali Zardari and Interior Minister Rehman Malik on World Press Freedom Day in May this year. While we were given reassurances that the president and his cabinet were aware and concerned about the problem, since that meeting two more journalists have died in targeted killings, several more have been beaten, and several have fled the country. With five dead so far in 2011 (three of them in targeted killings), Pakistan looks on pace to have an even worse record than last year’s death toll of eight dead–the highest in 2010. Pakistani journalists have to work together to assure their own protection. There is no other institution in the country that will do that for them.

Here’s that message from the KhUJ’s president, with the group’s revised safety guidelines:

Dear All:

Khyber Union of Journalists finally developed Standard Operation Procedures for the safety of journalists, photographers, Camera people and field staff including Drivers, Security guards and DSNG staff who have been covering conflict related issues. The union arranged two meetings with bureau chiefs of various electronic media channels to finalize the SOPs. The meetings were chaired by Arshad Aziz Malik, president KhUJ, while attended by Abdullah Jan, Bureau Chief Geo News, Saiful Islam Saifi president Peshawar Press Club, Yousaf Ali GS KhUJ, Shahid Hameed GS Peshawar Press Club, Safiullah Gul, Bureau Chief Dunya News, Zahir Shah Sherazi, Bureau Chief Dawn News, Jamshed Baghwan, Bureau Chief Express News, Iftikhar Firdous, Bureau Chief Express 24/7, Shokat Khattak, Bureau Chief Samaa, Ziaul Haq Bureau Chief ARY, Iqbal Khattak, Bureau Chief Daily Times, Waqas assistant controller news AVT Khyber, Shahzad Ahmed President Photographers association and others.

The meeting also constituted a three member committee comprising presidents of KhUJ and Peshawar Press Club and Abdullah Jan to monitor implementation of the SOPs.

It was also decided that all the bureau chiefs would have a check on their staff so that proper implementation of the procedures could be ensured. Awareness sessions for all the field staff would also be arranged so that they could be sensitized to this effect.

 

Standard Operation Procedures for

Journalists, Camera People, and Technical Staff

 

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