PFUJ calls for end to Impunity for Crimes Against Journalists
November 02, 2025: PFUJ urges Pakistan’s federal and provincial governments to end Impunity for Crimes Against Journalists and ensure their safety and press freedom.
JournalismPakistan.com | Published 8 years ago
Join our WhatsApp channel
WASHINGTON D.C. - The Bangladeshi Foreign Ministry should immediately and publicly rescind its instructions to the countries’ embassies to monitor journalists traveling abroad, the Committee to Protect Journalists said Friday.
In a letter sent to foreign missions on May 17, the ministry said journalists involved in activities that go “against the interest of the country” must be identified and reported to the ministry. The letter was signed by the director-general of the ministry’s External Publicity Wing, Md. Lutfor Rahman, and cited a recommendation from the Parliamentary Standing Committee, which had expressed concern about journalists abroad giving “wrong information on Bangladesh in the international arena.”
It was not immediately clear what prompted the concern. The Foreign Ministry did not immediately respond to CPJ’s emailed request for comment, and Rahman did not answer CPJ’s phone call.
“This directive turns Bangladeshi diplomats into media spies,” Robert Mahoney, CPJ’s deputy executive director, said from New York. “It is not the job of government to determine whether journalists are serving the interests of their country through their reporting. This order should be rescinded immediately.”
At a press briefing, Bangladeshi Foreign Minister Abul Hassan Mahmood Ali said that he had not seen the directive, but that journalists would not face any obstacles in their work or their ability to travel abroad, according to Dhaka’s Daily Star newspaper. The foreign minister also said he considered it necessary to monitor whether anyone was engaging in activities that go “against the country’s image and interest,” according to the Daily Star.
CPJ research shows a deteriorating climate for free expression in Bangladesh. - Committee to Protect Journalists
November 02, 2025: PFUJ urges Pakistan’s federal and provincial governments to end Impunity for Crimes Against Journalists and ensure their safety and press freedom.
November 02, 2025: Impunity for crimes against journalists deepens worldwide as Pakistan reports a 60 percent surge in attacks and weak enforcement of safety laws.
November 01, 2025: Pakistan Press Foundation reports 137 attacks on journalists in 2025, highlighting rising threats, legal harassment, and censorship on the International Day to End Impunity.
November 01, 2025: A viral Samaa TV clip featuring MNA Sher Afzal Marwat’s crude remarks and Talat Hussain’s laughter raises questions about the declining ethics of Pakistani television.
October 31, 2025: Police foiled a plot to kill DawnNewsTV journalist Tahir Naseer in Rawalpindi after arresting suspects hired for Rs200,000. Naseer says threats followed his reporting.
October 31, 2025: CPJ calls on Pakistan to bring Imtiaz Mir’s killers to justice after the journalist was allegedly murdered by a banned militant group in Karachi.
October 30, 2025: The PFUJ has condemned a fabricated drug case against journalist Matiullah Jan, calling it an attempt to silence him and urging authorities to quash the charges immediately.
October 30, 2025: NewsOne TV remains on air but faces mass layoffs and delayed salaries, exposing Pakistan’s worsening media crisis and financial instability.

November 02, 2025 Independent outlet All About Macau to halt print and online operations amid rising pressure, financial strain, and legal threats, sparking press freedom concerns in the city.

November 01, 2025 Belarus court jails journalist Siarhei Chabotska for extremism and defaming the president, highlighting Minsk’s ongoing crackdown on press freedom.

November 01, 2025 Mexican journalist Miguel Angel Beltran was found murdered in Durango. CPJ urges authorities to ensure justice amid rising violence against journalists in Mexico.

November 01, 2025 UNESCO survey finds one-third of media lawyers cannot effectively defend journalists due to threats, limited resources, and lack of specialization.

October 31, 2025 Radio Free Asia, a US government-funded broadcaster covering tightly controlled Asian media environments, has suspended all news operations after federal funding dried up.