Cairo book fair set to open with record participation Iran protests strain journalism amid 2,000 deaths Violence against journalists in the US draws advocacy group calls Journalist appeals to army chief over Islamabad tree cutting Press freedom continues to deteriorate in Hong Kong AI search summaries threaten referral traffic to news sites Reuters Institute report highlights pressure on journalism in 2026 Climate reporters in Asia face elevated safety risks, study finds Afghan media group condemns arrests and expulsion in Islamabad Internet shutdowns choke reporting from Iran protests Cairo book fair set to open with record participation Iran protests strain journalism amid 2,000 deaths Violence against journalists in the US draws advocacy group calls Journalist appeals to army chief over Islamabad tree cutting Press freedom continues to deteriorate in Hong Kong AI search summaries threaten referral traffic to news sites Reuters Institute report highlights pressure on journalism in 2026 Climate reporters in Asia face elevated safety risks, study finds Afghan media group condemns arrests and expulsion in Islamabad Internet shutdowns choke reporting from Iran protests
Logo
Janu
Unlocking the secrets of the media industry

Attack on Dawn journalist's home in Umerkot

 JournalismPakistan.com |  Published: 7 May 2020

Join our WhatsApp channel

Attack on Dawn journalist's home in Umerkot
A.B. Arisar, a journalist for Dawn, faced a violent attack at his home in Umerkot. Freedom Network condemned the incident and raised concerns about media safety in Sindh.

ISLAMABAD—Freedom Network has expressed serious concern over an attack on Dawn correspondent A.B. Arisar's home in Umerkot in Sindh.

In an alert on Twitter, the network condemned the incident and termed the increase in attacks on journalists in Sindh as alarming.

FN, in its Pakistan Press Freedom Report 2019-20 launched on April 30 had declared Sindh the second most unsafe place for media after Islamabad.

Dawn, while quoting Arisar said that police were informed but they returned axes and hammers used in the attack to the culprits and let them sneak away, adding that the attackers were disciples of a pir who wanted to occupy his house.

Illustration: http://shiitenews.org

KEY POINTS:

  • A.B. Arisar's home attacked in Umerkot, Sindh
  • Freedom Network expresses serious concern over journalist safety
  • Police reportedly returned tools to attackers without action
  • Sindh deemed second most unsafe region for media after Islamabad
  • Increased attacks on journalists raise alarm

Dive Deeper

Newsroom
Cairo book fair set to open with record participation

Cairo book fair set to open with record participation

 January 13, 2026 The 57th Cairo International Book Fair (Jan 21-Feb 3, 2026) in New Cairo hosts 1,457 publishing houses from 83 countries, with Romania as guest of honor.


IFJ condemns Iran's internet blackout during protests

IFJ condemns Iran's internet blackout during protests

 January 13, 2026 The IFJ condemned Iran's internet blackout during protests as a deliberate tactic that cripples reporting, obscures abuses and isolates journalists.


Iran protests strain journalism amid 2,000 deaths

Iran protests strain journalism amid 2,000 deaths

 January 13, 2026 Iranian officials say about 2,000 people died in nationwide protests, while internet blackouts and restrictions hinder journalists and impede information flow.


Violence against journalists in the US draws advocacy group calls

Violence against journalists in the US draws advocacy group calls

 January 13, 2026 Groups urge federal action to protect journalists after a rise in violence, harassment, arrests and interference while covering protests in the US.


Journalist appeals to army chief over Islamabad tree cutting

Journalist appeals to army chief over Islamabad tree cutting

 January 13, 2026 Pakistani journalist Rauf Klasra appeals to Army Chief Asim Munir to halt large-scale tree cutting in Islamabad for a memorial, warning of environmental harm amid public silence.


Popular Stories