Pakistan Today

BBC welcomes Pakistan PM pledge to look into ban

The BBC said Friday it welcomed a promise by Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani to investigate the blocking of the BBC World News channel in the country after it showed a documentary about the Taliban.
Pakistani cable operators pulled the channel nationwide on November 29 amid a row over the “Secret Pakistan” documentary and amid anger over NATO air strikes that killed 24 Pakistani soldiers.
In a statement issued in London, the BBC said Pakistan’s Prime Minister had pledged in an interview with the broadcaster that he would “look into” the ban.
“We remain deeply concerned that BBC World News has been taken off-air by the Cable Association of Pakistan,” a BBC spokesperson said.
Gilani said in the interview that Pakistani authorities supported media freedom and had abolished “Draconian” laws from the past.
“And we have given freedom of media, and you are a witness here that how many channels are working day in and day out against the government. And if this is a specific which you have mentioned, I will look into it,” the BBC quoted him as saying.
The two-part BBC documentary “Secret Pakistan” shown last month accuses parts of Pakistan’s intelligence service of complicity with Taliban militants.
Pakistan has aroused increasing criticism overseas and from human rights campaigners within the country over censorship.

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