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Journalists' body seeks justice for killings of Khashoggi, Sohail Khan

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Press Trust of India New Delhi

Journalists and defenders of free expression are among the first casualties of fearless and investigative reporting, a network of editors and journalists from South Asia said on Sunday, demanding swift and transparent investigation into the killing of Saudi commentator Jamal Khashoggi inside the Saudi mission in Istanbul.

"Time and again, journalists and defenders of free expression who are in the front line of seeking transparency but are among the first casualties of fearless and investigative reporting," said a statement by the South Asia Media Defenders Network (SAMDEN).

The Saudi government maintains that Khashoggi was accidentally killed in a brawl, but several reports say the incident was premeditated and cited Turkish officials' claim that he was brutally tortured, decapitated and his body dismembered, it said.

 

Some reports have even linked the event to Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

"The need for governments to look out for the safety of journalists is especially crucial at a time when global media freedom has fallen to its lowest levels since the start of the century.

"The atmosphere against free media is further vitiated by statements from US President Donald Trump, who has consistently disparaged independent media and who approvingly spoke of a 'body slam' on a reporter for the Guardian newspaper by a US legislator," the statement said.

Reporting conditions are increasingly dangerous in South Asia. Apart from attacks on women journalists in the ongoing confrontation over access to the Sabrimala shrine in Kerala, this past week, Pakistan saw the murder of its fourth journalist this year, it alleged.

On Wednesday, October 17, Sohail Khan was shot dead in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, reportedly in connection with his coverage of a drug baron in the area.

SAMDEN urged the provincial and federal administrations in Pakistan to bring those responsible to book.

It also called for the repeal of the controversial new Digital Security Act (DSA) in Bangladesh, the provisions of which could seriously cripple press freedom and curb free speech in the country.

The Act, which was passed last month, contains oppressive new provisions that give the government the power to arrest without a warrant and issue prison sentences for vaguely defined "crimes" such as "publishing information which is aggressive or frightening" and "posting information which ruins communal harmony", among others.

"We regard this as a blatant attempt to stifle media freedom and the right to free expression," the statement said.

It referred to the predecessor to the DSA -- the Information and Communication Technology (ICT) Act -- under which the police had arrested celebrated photojournalist Shahidul Alam last August for speaking out about student protests in Bangladesh.

SAMDEN urged the Bangladeshi government to release Shahidul Alam and extends its unconditional support to journalists facing violence across Asia.

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First Published: Oct 21 2018 | 8:15 PM IST

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