What the 60 Minutes controversy means for TV journalism RFE/RL journalists persist with Iran war coverage amid risks Zee secures FIFA World Cup rights in India through 2030 How fact-checkers verify viral videos during breaking news Pentagon restrictions on reporters draw media backlash Israel-Lebanon talks proceed as conflict hinders reporting Why governments are tightening controls on foreign journalists China condemns US restrictions on Xinhua reporter Taiwan condemns China over New York Times reporter expulsion The biggest threats facing journalism in Asia today Press freedom review: The many faces of pressure on the press Five warning signs for global journalism in May 2026 Cybercrime, courtrooms, and newsroom cuts: What defined Pakistan media in May Gaza journalists win 2026 Golden Pen of Freedom award When AI writes the news, who checks the facts? What the 60 Minutes controversy means for TV journalism RFE/RL journalists persist with Iran war coverage amid risks Zee secures FIFA World Cup rights in India through 2030 How fact-checkers verify viral videos during breaking news Pentagon restrictions on reporters draw media backlash Israel-Lebanon talks proceed as conflict hinders reporting Why governments are tightening controls on foreign journalists China condemns US restrictions on Xinhua reporter Taiwan condemns China over New York Times reporter expulsion The biggest threats facing journalism in Asia today Press freedom review: The many faces of pressure on the press Five warning signs for global journalism in May 2026 Cybercrime, courtrooms, and newsroom cuts: What defined Pakistan media in May Gaza journalists win 2026 Golden Pen of Freedom award When AI writes the news, who checks the facts?
Logo
Janu
Women in Media

Journalist kidnapped in Quetta

 JournalismPakistan.com |  Published: 10 November 2015

Join our WhatsApp channel

Journalist kidnapped in Quetta
Afzal Mughal, a journalist with Daily Mashriq, was abducted from his home in Quetta and held for 15 hours. Police have launched an investigation into the incident.

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.

Key Points

  • Afzal Mughal was kidnapped by eight masked gunmen.
  • He was held for 15 hours before being released.
  • Mughal reported being questioned about his profession and contacts.
  • His wife reported that the kidnappers tortured him.
  • Police have registered a case and are investigating the incident.

Ask AI: Understand this story your way

AI Enabled

Dig deeper, ask anything — get instant context, background, and clarity.

Not sure what to choose? Try one of these.

The AI generates results based on your selected options
Your AI-generated results will appear here after you click the button.

Disclaimer: This feature is powered by AI and is intended to help readers explore and understand news stories more easily. While we strive for accuracy, AI-generated responses may occasionally be incomplete or reflect limitations in the underlying model. This feature does not represent the editorial views of JournalismPakistan. For our full, verified reporting, please refer to the original article.

Don't Miss These

Newsroom
What the 60 Minutes controversy means for TV journalism

What the 60 Minutes controversy means for TV journalism

 June 03, 2026 The 60 Minutes controversy at CBS exposes tensions over leadership, editorial independence and pressures on legacy TV journalism amid political polarization.


RFE/RL journalists persist with Iran war coverage amid risks

RFE/RL journalists persist with Iran war coverage amid risks

 June 03, 2026 RFE/RL journalists, including Persian-language reporters, continue covering the Iran-Israel-US conflict despite heightened security risks, restricted access, and significant operational challenges.


Zee secures FIFA World Cup rights in India through 2030

Zee secures FIFA World Cup rights in India through 2030

 June 03, 2026 Zee Entertainment has secured broadcasting and digital rights in India for the 2026 and 2030 FIFA World Cups, reshaping the country's sports media landscape.


How fact-checkers verify viral videos during breaking news

How fact-checkers verify viral videos during breaking news

 June 02, 2026 Fact-checkers use source tracking, metadata, visual analysis and geolocation to verify whether viral videos in breaking news are authentic and timely.


Pentagon restrictions on reporters draw media backlash

Pentagon restrictions on reporters draw media backlash

 June 02, 2026 New Pentagon rules requiring official escorts for reporters in some areas have drawn criticism from press groups and major news organizations over transparency.


Popular Stories