Pakistan: The Danger of Being a Journalist

by Silvia Duarte  /  June 16, 2011  / No comments



On June 11, eight journalists were wounded, and one, Abid Naveed, was killed. Photo:EPA/BILAWAL ARBAB

On June 11 in the Pakistani city of Peshawar, a small explosion went off in a restaurant bathroom. The damage was minimal, but journalists arrived at the scene regardless. Soon afterwards, a suicide bomber arrived on a motorcycle and detonated a much larger explosion which killed 34 people and wounded 100 others.

Eight journalists were wounded, and one, Abid Naveed, was killed. Naveed had survived an earlier attack in 2009 on the Peshawar Press Club.

The recent attack, one in a long series of violent acts against journalists, has caused several editors in the city to ask their journalists to work from home for their own safety. Many newspaper offices are currently closed while editors consider moving their offices elsewhere.

Reporters Without Borders is calling on the Pakistani government to protect journalists and support free speech. Pakistan is currently rated 151st out of 178 by Reporters Without Borders’ press freedom index. The organization fears that inaction on the part of the government will lead to self-censorship by journalists trying to protect themselves.

About the Author

Silvia Duarte is the managing editor of Sampsonia Way. She received her degree in Communication Sciences from Rafael Landivar University in Guatemala and her masters in Latin American studies from the Autonomous University of Madrid in Spain. Duarte was editor of El Periódico de Guatemala’s Sunday magazine from 2001 to 2006 and has written scholarly and journalistic articles in Germany, Spain, and the United States. She came to Pittsburgh in 2007 with her partner writer-in-exile Horacio Castellanos.

View all articles by Silvia Duarte

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