Senator calls for probe into sinister anti-press ordinance

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Senator also raises the issue of forcible eviction of Loaralai residents by Cantt authorities

ISLAMABAD: Senator Farhatullah Babar on Monday asked for an inquiry into the drafting of anti-print media ordinance which he claimed had been “secretly drafted in the darkness of the night, behind the back of Parliament and stake holders to stifle the newspaper through unprecedented coercive measures”.

Speaking on a point of public importance in the Senate and waving a copy of the said Ordinance, the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) senator said that Pakistan Print Media Regulatory Authority (PPMRA) Ordinance was a throwback to the notorious 1963 Press and Publications Ordinance of Ayub era that muzzled the newspapers in the name of national interest for over three decades.

The Ordinance proposes to set up a new authority with functions to prepare new guidelines for the issuance of declarations and powers to reviews the declarations annually and even revoke them if the newspaper was found to violate the authority’s rules and arbitrary guidelines. Raids and punishment to journalists and publishers are also envisaged in the Ordinance.

The proposed authority will be bound to follow instructions of the government in policy matters. It will devise a code of conduct that will be binding on the newspapers. One of the functions of the authority is to make the newspapers “more responsive to issues of concern to the state and society”, he said. Thus the authority and not newspaper editors or journalists will decide on the “issues of concern to state and society”, he said.

This is unacceptable he said and asked that the move be immediately reversed.

He challenged the assertion that Information Minister Marrium Aurangzeb was unaware of it and read out from a recent letter of the Ministry of Information addressed to the Press Council of Pakistan chairman. It stated, “It is stated that the minister of State for Information, Broadcasting and National Heritage during the presentation dated March 3, 2017 given to her on the above-noted subject advised PCP Management to enrich and improve the draft of Pakistan Print Media regulatory Authority (PPMRA) Ordinance on the pattern of PEMRA (Amendment ) Act 2007”.

“Marrium Aurangzeb is an honourable person and may be saying the truth that she is unaware but one thing is undeniable; someone in the ministry has used her name to secretly promulgate a sinister anti-newspaper ordinance”, he said. He then gave a copy of the draft and ministry’s letter to PCP to senate secretariat to get the matter investigated.

On another point of public importance, he raised the issue of forcible eviction of some poor residents by the cantonment board authorities in Loralai, Balochistan, on the ground of ‘bad reputation’. He said that four of the victims had travelled all the way from Loralai and were sitting in the lobby of the Senate to petition the upper house.

He said that the matter had previously been taken up by the defence committee of the senate which questioned powers of the cantonment board to evict residents who regularly paid the rent. The declaration of ‘bad character’ could only be made by the courts and even in that case a resident may be punished under the law but not evicted from the quarter.

He said that the courts had also exonerated the evicted residents of the charges but they were still not allowed to return to their homes which had been locked by the authorities. By this high-handedness, we are only alienating the people and forcing them to take to the hills and become militants, he warned, and called upon the authorities to reconsider the decision to evict them.