(Reuters) -
Pakistani television channel Geo News is suing the powerful spy agency
for defamation over accusations of being anti-state, it said on Friday,
in a move unprecedented in a country where public criticism of the
military is taboo. In the latest twist in
a saga that has captivated the country, Pakistan's media regulator also
suspended Geo for 15 days for reporting that the ISI spy agency was
behind the April shooting of one of Pakistan's most famous journalists. "Geo and Jang Group (have) served legal notice on the Ministry of Defense, Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) and Pakistan
Electronic Media Regulatory Authority (PEMRA) for defaming and
maligning the group," the channel said in a report published in a
newspaper owned by its parent company. "More
than 8,000 journalists, workers and professionals attached to the group
and their families are not only being harassed but also attacked and
tortured across Pakistan." Geo News has also given the ISI 14 days to retract its accusations and issue a public apology. The
standoff over Geo, part of the privately owned Jang Group, has exposed
divisions between Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and the army which has
ruled the country for more than half of its history. The
military has long seen the government's resistance to efforts to shut
Geo News as a sign of defiance and PEMRA's latest move is seen as a
compromise solution after weeks of tension. In
April, Pakistan's Defense Ministry had demanded that the license of Geo
News be suspended after it reported that the ISI was behind the
shooting of one of Pakistan's most famous journalists. The
PEMRA media regulator said in a statement on Friday it had formally
shut down Geo News for 15 days and imposed a $101,500 fine. "The
authority...took a strong notice of violations committed by Geo News
and unanimously decided to immediately suspend the license of the said
channel for a period of 15 days besides imposing a fine of Rs10
million," the regulator announced in a statement. But
even before the PEMRA order, the channel had been taken off the air in
several parts of the country since the dispute began, allegedly under
army pressure, according to its lawsuit. Distribution of the parent group's newspapers has also been disrupted. Last month, the channel apologized for the allegations against the ISI but temperatures have failed to cool. A spokesman for the military was not immediately available for comment. April's
shooting of Hamid Mir, a journalist anchoring Pakistan's top political
news talk show, sent a chill through the media community weeks after
television anchor Raza Rumi was attacked in the city of Lahore. Rumi
survived but his driver was shot dead. Although
Pakistani media have become increasingly vibrant in recent years, with
stories exposing corruption or injustices appearing frequently on the
pages of the country's many dailies, public criticism of the army or the
ISI is largely taboo. No
one has claimed responsibility for the recent assaults, although the
Taliban, holed up in mountains on the Afghan border, have made repeated
threats against domestic and foreign reporters for portraying the
insurgency in a negative light.
Pakistani TV channel sues powerful spy agency for defamation
Reuters
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