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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, March 29, 2019
Pakistan investigates journalists for honouring Khashoggi during MBS visit
In a letter, Federal Investigation Agency says reporters 'conveyed a very disrespectful message' during Saudi trip in February
Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan greets Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in Rawalpindi in February (Reuters)

Pakistan’s Federal Investigation Agency launched an investigation into
journalists and political parties that changed their social media
profile photos to that of murdered journalist Jamal Khashoggi during
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s visit to the country last
month.
According to a letter dated 13 March, the agency’s cybercrime wing was
monitoring the social media accounts of six journalists and four
political groups.
“A targeted social media campaign was planned/executed against the visit
during which few social media activists and groups remained
particularly consistent/active till the very last day of the visit,”
says the letter, which was shared widely on social media.
The six journalists, the letter says, displayed Khashoggi’s photo. This
act "conveyed a very disrespectful message to the visiting
dignity[sic]/guest”.
Saudi journalist Khashoggi, a Middle East Eye and Washington Post
columnist, was murdered and dismembered by a team of Saudi operatives in
his country's consulate in Istanbul in October.
His assassination caused an international outcry and poured public and official scorn on Riyadh.
The CIA has concluded that Mohammed bin Salman almost certainly signed
off on the operation, though the kingdom denies the crown prince was
involved in the plot or its botched coverup.
There were no major protests in Pakistan during Mohammad Bin Salman’s
visit to Islamabad with the capital in complete lockdown in order to
ensure the security of the Saudi delegates.
Murtaza Solangi, former Director General of Radio Pakistan and one of
the journalists named on the list, told Middle East Eye that he and
others were adopting “a peaceful token protest”.
“They do not want any kind of protest against Mohammed bin Salman,” Solangi said.
Following last month’s visit, Solangi received a leaked letter from the
Federal Investigation Agency (FIA), a wing of Pakistan’s cybercrime
body.
Solangi believes he and others were monitored because the Pakistani
government needs the financial support that Saudi Arabia offered during
the visit, including investment projects worth as much as $20bn.
“Imran Khan’s government is desperately trying to kick start the
economy. Khan’s administration were bending over backwards to appease
the Saudi monarchy,” he told MEE.
Ayesha Siddiqa, research associate at SOAS South Asia Institute, agrees:
“The model Pakistan is looking to follow is to silence the state and is
mirroring the kingdom’s censorship. Prior to the crown prince's visit
to Pakistan, the government sent officials to various media outlets to
prescribe the rules of engagement for journalists that must be obeyed to
the letter.”
'We never thought using somebody’s display picture was a crime'- Umar Cheema, journalist
The journalists argue that their protest was completely professional and
in the domain of human rights. They said: “We have been voicing our
concerns against the brutal murder of Khashoggi for some time but the
Saudi prince’s visit was the aptest time to raise the issue”.
Umar Cheema, another one of the journalists, said it was the first time the FIA had taken such strong measures.
“We never thought using somebody’s display picture was a crime,” Cheema, who is very well known in Pakistan, said.
“We have already lost the press freedoms if you look at the wording of
the document. They are acting very discreetly, they are requesting us to
contact the agency in confidence without involving the target of the
investigation.”
Contacted by phone, Bashir Memon, FIA director general, told MEE: “I
cannot comment at this stage.” Abdur Rauf, deputy director of the
cybercrimes wing, did not respond to repeated requests for comment on
Thursday.
The letter’s authenticity has been called into question by journalists.
However, a member of the FIA who spoke on condition of anonymity,
confirmed that it was an official agency document.
While the letter instructs the interior ministry to act on the FIA’s
findings, it is not clear who who first instructed the agency to conduct
their investigation, a question Pakistani journalists have been asking
repeatedly on Thursday.
Pakistan’s prime minister is responsible for the interior ministry,
therefore many of the journalists are concerned by the next steps by
those that ordered the investigation as currently no additional requests
have been made since circulation.
The Saudi footprint in Pakistan’s media landscape has been steadily
increasing, with recent launches of Urdu editions of both the
Saudi-owned Arab News and the Independent. Last year, MEE was the first
to report that a Saudi national had acquired up to 50 percent of the
news site.
According to a 2018 Reporters Without Borders report, the number of journalists and bloggers in Saudi prisons has doubled since Mohammed bin Salman became crown prince.
That trend has left many Pakistani media bodies concerned about the
costs that the country’s press corps will have to bear to continue
receiving the kingdom’s investment.
One reporter who spoke on the condition of anonymity said: “MBS has set
new terms. We are feeling very uneasy about Saudi money, but as the
Pakistani media houses are facing financial closure, we have no choice
but to apply at the Arab media outlets.”
Ammar Masoon, another journalist mention in the FIA letter, tweeted:
So now journalists will b punished on changing their DP? The state of freedom of expression is under real threat in Pakistan #freedomofexpression
578 people are talking about this
Umar Cheema told MEE he believes this could be a watershed moment as Pakistan sets a new precedent to gradually silence critics.
“They are trying to undermine the confidence of journalists - making us
think a hundred times before we post anything politically inclined,” he
said.