View Single Post
  #39  
Old Thursday, April 24, 2014
Gypsified's Avatar
Gypsified Gypsified is offline
Senior Member
Qualifier: Awarded to those Members who cleared css written examination - Issue reason: CE 2014
 
Join Date: Jun 2013
Posts: 370
Thanks: 97
Thanked 347 Times in 205 Posts
Gypsified will become famous soon enoughGypsified will become famous soon enough
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Artemis View Post
I do not think that one incidence of violence can justify another. Even if 1000 people were killed that very day this is no excuse for attack on Hamid Mir, similarly neither is this attack an excuse for others.

Attacks on famous people generate more attention among general public, this is natural.

Media exists to protect individuals' liberties including freedom of expression and if freedom of media itself is threatened, that is alarming.

If security establishment is so utterly concerned about its image why don't they address the issues insetad, like kill and dump policy in Balochistan. There is nothing new in these allegations nor is this the first time they have been leveled.

Threatening people, kidnapping them, beating them up; is this the operational procedure ? Ethical standards never bother agencies but at least they should have some operational standards. Every where in the world agencies exercise control but there should be a better way than this. One wonders, which century our agencies are still functioning in?

What public is doing here is blaming the victim. A typical TM attitude of our nation. If there are acid attacks this is fine but if someone makes a documentary on it, she should be condemned. Because as long as we can carry out such attacks without world knowing about it they are 'harmless'. If any institution threatens journalists it is fine, the only problem is them going public.

Image of a country and image of any state organ are not the same . Consider this, every one knew about Gunatanamo and prisoners abuse in Iraq. When American public and American media mounted pressure on govt to come clean on this, the world was not like, 'Only now have we discovered about the abuses and it has been proved once for all that America is the bad guy'. Instead the impression was ' the national conscience is alive, if any state institution commits such acts the nation will hold them responsible or at least American public disapproves it'. Therefore, image of Pakistan is not image of army+ image of ISI + image of media and so on; the whole is more than sum of its parts here.

Right or wrong, true or untrue an opinion was expressed. The institution with grievance should go public as well and complain only if there point of view isn't covered by media. You can not punish people or institutions just because they have a particular point of view. This is basic fundamental right; God damn it!
Excellent! The whole thing is articulated too well. The point about the mentality of blaming the victim was spot on.

It's very interesting that the same people who are screaming their lungs about media ethics and regulations (on television and in general) have never so much as remotely insinuated at all the extra-judicial measures of intelligence agencies and to bring them under regulations. No one seemed to bother much when mass graves were discovered in Baluchistan because guess what? RAW conspiracy. Mama Qadeer? Indian agent. Everyone is overflowing to suggest media ethics and ban (because banning things is like our national sport) them but when it comes to regulations about intelligence agencies, just zip your mouth and look sideways.

And somehow they have been tricked into believing that questioning the objectionable measures of secret agency is against "national security" (a meaningless terms which nobody thinks about while throwing around). If this is really so, US must have the weakest national security considering how FBI and CIA have been grilled by the media post-WWII (actually, reports about our agencies also come through their media because our agencies are so efficient they can't even protect their confidential reports).

This is just because of our disdain for anything democratic that infests us like a disease. Azad was right on the spot when he said democracy can never take roots in Pakistan because its people simply don't have that mentality. Over the past 66 years, we have only proved him right.
Reply With Quote