GlobalVillageSpace
Media Partner
- Joined
- Mar 4, 2017
- Messages
- 993
- Reaction score
- 1
- Country
- Location
Pakistan’s private media: Free or captured?
Global Village Space |
Pakistanis are still celebrating their fantasy of “free media”; ironically the penetration of vested political and economic interests in country’s so called “free media” – and thus on minds – is so strong and complete that few in the Pakistani media and academia talk or write about “Media Capture”, but this is becoming an insanely growing reality worldwide and more and more citizen groups and universities are trying to grapple with the subject.
A personal experience
I was attending a two-week intensive summer course in Budapest. This course titled as “Media Capture: The Relationship between Power, Media Freedom, and Advocacy” was organized by Centre for Media, Data and Society at Central European University, Budapest.
Living, working and teaching in Lahore, I did observe or hear patchy details of government or establishment’s influence on media but the bigger picture, of our own plight, suddenly dawned on me when I was attending a two-week intensive summer course in Budapest. This course titled as “Media Capture: The Relationship between Power, Media Freedom, and Advocacy” was organized by Centre for Media, Data and Society at Central European University, Budapest.
Read more: Our government needs to stop looking at our private parts
Bit by bit, I was absorbing streams of information from the podium and from interaction with course participants – many of whom were media professionals from across Europe – and I could relate this to my own habitat: Pakistan. I could see it emerging in front of my eyes that endemic challenge of media freedom is subject to potential threats largely drawn by elements of state capture, in order to propagate potentially favorable ideas supportive of government or state, thus enabling or creating the state of Media Capture.
The endemic challenge of media freedom is subject to potential threats largely drawn by elements of state capture
Media capture in a “free” society
According to Alina Mungiu-Pippidi, a writer on the subject, this is pertinent to societies where the media, having failed to achieve an autonomous position in society, are controlled “either directly by governments or by vested interests networked with politics.”
Media Capture, in an apparently free society, is facilitated by an organized network of control over media information through various established sources. According to Alina Mungiu-Pippidi, a writer on the subject, this is pertinent to societies where the media, having failed to achieve an autonomous position in society, are controlled “either directly by governments or by vested interests networked with politics.”In our seminars, Malaysia was taken as a case study of ‘how it happens’. The case study reveals that how Najib Razak’s Government (2009-2017) has been predominantly influencing Malaysian Media through power and has maintained control over ‘regulation’, ‘ownership’, ‘funding’ and ‘public media’ entities.
Read more: Pakistan: Big Brother is watching you!
Studying the Malaysian model made me realize what has been happening in Pakistan. How government’s massive advertisement campaigns, illegal payments to journalists either in business facilitation or cash payments, selective access to official channels of information, luxurious foreign trips of media persons along with top political executives, control on licensing and harassment by PEMRA, all have been used systematically in the past few years to curtail the genuine journalistic freedoms – turning Pakistani media into a “controlled and mostly impotent noise box”
Stem/Mark media research project draws an interesting comparison of growing concentration of newspaper ownership in the Czech Republic between the period, 1994-2003 where pure industrialist ownership increased to 59% and political/industrialist to 33%
Media pluralism is an integral component of any liberal democracy but studies, across newly liberated social and political orders, show that how large private media outlets are growing and captivating more and more of public media sphere. Stem/Mark media research project draws an interesting comparison of growing concentration of newspaper ownership in the Czech Republic between the period, 1994-2003 where pure industrialist ownership increased to 59% and political/industrialist to 33%. It also reveals a decline in pure media ownership by professional journalists. Transnational case studies like on Zimbabwe and Slovakia also indicate the weakness of regulatory and policy structure allowing media monopoly.
Read full article ...........
Pakistan’s private media: Free or captured?
Global Village Space |
Pakistanis are still celebrating their fantasy of “free media”; ironically the penetration of vested political and economic interests in country’s so called “free media” – and thus on minds – is so strong and complete that few in the Pakistani media and academia talk or write about “Media Capture”, but this is becoming an insanely growing reality worldwide and more and more citizen groups and universities are trying to grapple with the subject.
A personal experience
I was attending a two-week intensive summer course in Budapest. This course titled as “Media Capture: The Relationship between Power, Media Freedom, and Advocacy” was organized by Centre for Media, Data and Society at Central European University, Budapest.
Living, working and teaching in Lahore, I did observe or hear patchy details of government or establishment’s influence on media but the bigger picture, of our own plight, suddenly dawned on me when I was attending a two-week intensive summer course in Budapest. This course titled as “Media Capture: The Relationship between Power, Media Freedom, and Advocacy” was organized by Centre for Media, Data and Society at Central European University, Budapest.
Read more: Our government needs to stop looking at our private parts
Bit by bit, I was absorbing streams of information from the podium and from interaction with course participants – many of whom were media professionals from across Europe – and I could relate this to my own habitat: Pakistan. I could see it emerging in front of my eyes that endemic challenge of media freedom is subject to potential threats largely drawn by elements of state capture, in order to propagate potentially favorable ideas supportive of government or state, thus enabling or creating the state of Media Capture.
The endemic challenge of media freedom is subject to potential threats largely drawn by elements of state capture
Media capture in a “free” society
According to Alina Mungiu-Pippidi, a writer on the subject, this is pertinent to societies where the media, having failed to achieve an autonomous position in society, are controlled “either directly by governments or by vested interests networked with politics.”
Media Capture, in an apparently free society, is facilitated by an organized network of control over media information through various established sources. According to Alina Mungiu-Pippidi, a writer on the subject, this is pertinent to societies where the media, having failed to achieve an autonomous position in society, are controlled “either directly by governments or by vested interests networked with politics.”In our seminars, Malaysia was taken as a case study of ‘how it happens’. The case study reveals that how Najib Razak’s Government (2009-2017) has been predominantly influencing Malaysian Media through power and has maintained control over ‘regulation’, ‘ownership’, ‘funding’ and ‘public media’ entities.
Read more: Pakistan: Big Brother is watching you!
Studying the Malaysian model made me realize what has been happening in Pakistan. How government’s massive advertisement campaigns, illegal payments to journalists either in business facilitation or cash payments, selective access to official channels of information, luxurious foreign trips of media persons along with top political executives, control on licensing and harassment by PEMRA, all have been used systematically in the past few years to curtail the genuine journalistic freedoms – turning Pakistani media into a “controlled and mostly impotent noise box”
Stem/Mark media research project draws an interesting comparison of growing concentration of newspaper ownership in the Czech Republic between the period, 1994-2003 where pure industrialist ownership increased to 59% and political/industrialist to 33%
Media pluralism is an integral component of any liberal democracy but studies, across newly liberated social and political orders, show that how large private media outlets are growing and captivating more and more of public media sphere. Stem/Mark media research project draws an interesting comparison of growing concentration of newspaper ownership in the Czech Republic between the period, 1994-2003 where pure industrialist ownership increased to 59% and political/industrialist to 33%. It also reveals a decline in pure media ownership by professional journalists. Transnational case studies like on Zimbabwe and Slovakia also indicate the weakness of regulatory and policy structure allowing media monopoly.
Read full article ...........
Pakistan’s private media: Free or captured?