Fahd Husain back to writing column at The Express Tribune Podcasting rises as South Asia’s new news frontier Najam Sethi quits Samaa TV for Dunya TV move Nigeria jails journalists amid cybercrime law concerns Sami Hamdi returns to UK following U.S. detention over Gaza comments Fiona O’Brien appointed CPJ Regional Director for Europe and Central Asia Japanese publishers file AI copyright lawsuits, pressing industry-wide legal reforms OSCE hosts Central Asia Media Conference on Sustainability and Press Freedom Beijing court upholds espionage conviction of journalist Dawn’s AI gaffe highlights challenges, not the collapse of journalism

Journalist kidnapped in Quetta

 JournalismPakistan.com |  Published 10 years ago

Join our WhatsApp channel

Journalist kidnapped in Quetta

QUETTA: Afzal Mughal, a journalist with Urdu language newspaper Daily Mashriq was abducted from his home in Quetta Tuesday and released 15 hours later.

Police said that at least eight masked gunmen broke into Mughal's home, dragged him into a waiting vehicle and drove away. He was later dropped outside his house. It was not immediately clear who the kidnappers were.

Nbcnews.com quoted Mughal as saying his captors asked him "hundreds of questions" about his family, professional life, and phone calls from banned militant groups that he said he received as part of his job.

 

Meanwhile, Online news agency reported that Mughal, a resident of Shahbaz Town, worked as a sub-editor with a local news agency. His wife lodged a complaint with the local police that 10 armed masked men broke into their house at midnight and held family members hostage at gun point.

She told the police the attackers tortured her husband before kidnapping him. The police have registered a case and started investigations.

Committee to Protect Journalists says threats to journalists stream from military and intelligence agencies, political parties, criminal groups and militants, and corrupt local leaders.
 

Don't Miss These

Newsroom
Podcasting rises as South Asia’s new news frontier

Podcasting rises as South Asia’s new news frontier

 November 16, 2025 Podcasting is transforming how audiences in South Asia consume news, offering mobility, depth, and independence as traditional media face pressure and digital habits rapidly evolve.


Nigeria jails journalists amid cybercrime law concerns

Nigeria jails journalists amid cybercrime law concerns

 November 15, 2025 Three Nigerian journalists are detained under the Cybercrime Act despite 2024 reforms, raising concerns for press freedom ahead of the 2027 elections.


Sami Hamdi returns to UK following U.S. detention over Gaza comments

Sami Hamdi returns to UK following U.S. detention over Gaza comments

 November 14, 2025 British commentator Sami Hamdi returns to the UK after a U.S. visa cancellation and detention during a Gaza speaking tour, highlighting free speech and press freedom concerns.


Fiona O’Brien appointed CPJ Regional Director for Europe and Central Asia

Fiona O’Brien appointed CPJ Regional Director for Europe and Central Asia

 November 14, 2025 Fiona O’Brien named CPJ Regional Director for Europe and Central Asia, strengthening press freedom advocacy amid rising global threats to journalists.


Japanese publishers file AI copyright lawsuits, pressing industry-wide legal reforms

Japanese publishers file AI copyright lawsuits, pressing industry-wide legal reforms

 November 14, 2025 Japanese publishers launch AI copyright lawsuits, pushing for stricter licensing rules and reshaping how media content can be used to train AI models.


Popular Stories