Sindh lawmaker apologizes after raising false news of Moin Khan’s death India journalists attacked during corruption probe at RTO office Algerian court upholds 7-year jail term for French journalist Christophe Gleizes Pakistani journalist wins climate change reporting contest India scraps mandatory Sanchar Saathi app pre-install after backlash AI-generated video falsely links Imran Khan sister to war comments Kazakhstan urged to drop charges against Orda editor Myanmar frees two jailed journalists in mass amnesty ahead of election White House page on media bias raises press freedom concerns Pakistan forms commission to protect journalists and media workers Sindh lawmaker apologizes after raising false news of Moin Khan’s death India journalists attacked during corruption probe at RTO office Algerian court upholds 7-year jail term for French journalist Christophe Gleizes Pakistani journalist wins climate change reporting contest India scraps mandatory Sanchar Saathi app pre-install after backlash AI-generated video falsely links Imran Khan sister to war comments Kazakhstan urged to drop charges against Orda editor Myanmar frees two jailed journalists in mass amnesty ahead of election White House page on media bias raises press freedom concerns Pakistan forms commission to protect journalists and media workers
Logo
Janu
Featured

Indonesia restores reporter's palace access after revocation sparks press freedom concerns

 JournalismPakistan.com |  Published 2 months ago |  Reuters

Join our WhatsApp channel

Indonesia restores reporter's palace access after revocation sparks press freedom concerns

JAKARTA—The office of Indonesia's President Prabowo Subianto on Monday restored access for a CNN Indonesia journalist, having earlier revoked it after she had asked the leader about a troubled free meal programme, sparking concerns about press freedom.

CNN Indonesia editor-in-chief Titin Rosmasari met with the Indonesian palace and confirmed the journalist's access had been restored, CNN Indonesia reported. The palace had apologised for the revocation and said it would not be repeated, it added.

Indonesia's main press council had on Sunday said the palace should explain its reasoning and restore the reporter's access, calling for the protection of press freedom. 

Titin told Reuters earlier on Monday that the reporter's credentials were revoked on Saturday night. She also told the magazine Tempo that the revocation was related to the reporter's question about thousands of school children who fell sick after consuming food served in the free meal programme.

The reporter asked Prabowo on Saturday whether he had instructions for the National Nutrition Agency overseeing the programme, news footage shows.

Prabowo said he would summon the agency and said "this is a huge matter," adding there were bound to be shortcomings at the beginning of the programme and urging caution against politicisation.

Tempo reported that other journalists at the event were only allowed to ask about Prabowo's international trip last week, which included a stop at the United Nations headquarters.

Nearly 6,000 children have fallen sick after consuming food as part of Prabowo's multi-billion dollar free meal programme since its January roll-out, government data shows, more than 1,000 of whom were impacted last week.

The deputy head of the agency in charge on Friday apologised for the food poisoning cases, saying there was a lack of oversight and the agency took full responsibility.

Indonesia ranks 127th out of 180 countries and territories in the 2025 World Press Freedom Index by Reporters Without Borders, having fallen 16 places in one year.

 

 

Don't Miss These

Newsroom
Sindh lawmaker apologizes after raising false news of Moin Khan’s death

Sindh lawmaker apologizes after raising false news of Moin Khan’s death

 December 06, 2025 A Sindh lawmaker apologized after mistakenly announcing cricketer Moin Khan’s death in the Assembly, highlighting concerns over rising misinformation and social media rumors in Pakistan.


Algerian court upholds 7-year jail term for French journalist Christophe Gleizes

Algerian court upholds 7-year jail term for French journalist Christophe Gleizes

 December 04, 2025 An Algerian appeals court affirmed a 7-year prison sentence for French journalist Christophe Gleizes, drawing sharp international criticism and raising urgent concerns about press freedom under Algeria’s anti-terrorism laws.


Pakistani journalist wins climate change reporting contest

Pakistani journalist wins climate change reporting contest

 December 04, 2025 Samaa Digital journalist Wajid Ali wins a British High Commission climate contest for his story on Pakistan’s street workers, blending faith perspectives with science to raise awareness.


Rainforest grant offers support for global environmental reporting

Rainforest grant offers support for global environmental reporting

 December 03, 2025 The Rainforest Reporting Grant offers rolling, project-based funding for journalists covering tropical forests, biodiversity, Indigenous rights, and environmental issues across three global regions.


AI-generated video falsely links Imran Khan sister to war comments

AI-generated video falsely links Imran Khan sister to war comments

 December 03, 2025 Prominent journalist issues warning over a fabricated deepfake video falsely claiming her Sky News interview featured a 2025 Pakistan-India war discussion, part of rising digital misinformation campaigns.


Popular Stories