Veteran journalist M. Ziauddin calls for urgent training of journalists to cover war zones in Pakistan. He points out the long-standing reliance on foreign news agencies for reporting on local conflicts.
Summary
ISLAMABAD: Veteran journalist and columnist M. Ziauddin has urged all media organizations to start crash courses for journalists to work in war zones as almost entire country has turned into a battle field.
In his article Wednesday, “Wanted: Trained war correspondents,” in The Express Tribune he said that Pakistan has been at war for almost the last 35 years but media organizations have failed to produce even a handful of trained war reporters.
He recounted Pakistan’s involvement in Afghanistan to defeat Soviet Union and in Indian-held Kashmir to back freedom fighters but the local media organizations remain totally dependent on foreign news agencies for news.
“There was no coverage from the war theatres by correspondents of our mainstream media. Whatever coverage appeared in our major newspapers was courtesy of foreign news agencies,” he wrote.
He said the whole country has now turned into a battle field due to terrorism and terrorist attacks but there are no trained journalists to cover the violence.
“And that is perhaps why we have lost so many journalists in this war in the last 10 years or so. Pakistan, today, is known as one of most dangerous places for media practitioners,” he said.
He urged all media organizations to train their journalists on the principles of working in a war zone to better cover the terror incidents and save precious lives of journalists.
Key Points
Ziauddin emphasizes the need for crash courses in war journalism.
Pakistan has been at war for 35 years with insufficient trained correspondents.
Local media heavily depend on foreign news agencies for coverage.
Rising terrorism has made Pakistan one of the most dangerous places for journalists.
Training in war reporting is essential to protect journalists and enhance coverage.
Dig deeper, ask anything — get instant context, background, and clarity.
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.
June 05, 2026: Pakistani camerapersons face serious risks covering floods, protests and attacks, often without training, protective gear or employer support.
May 31, 2026: May showed Pakistan's media under pressure from cybercrime enforcement, legal cases, newsroom layoffs and salary delays, plus tightened access for journalists.
May 24, 2026: Journalists walked out of the Parliament press gallery after claims that a Geo News reporter was barred from covering proceedings after questioning Bilawal.
May 23, 2026: Journalist Muhammad Saad was released after weeks in custody in a counterterrorism case; he thanked supporters and said he would not comment on the legal matter.
May 16, 2026: KP journalists protested over unpaid salaries and forced layoffs, demanding stronger labor protections and that state advertising be linked to clearing dues.
May 10, 2026: Journalist Imtiaz Chandio faces a terrorism FIR in Sindh after social media criticism of the SPSC, prompting concerns over use of penal laws against journalists.
May 04, 2026: PNP announced winners of its World Press Freedom Day Quiz 2026, a nationwide initiative to strengthen media literacy and awareness of press freedom.
June 06, 2026 Publishers want AI firms to pay for using their news to train models and power chatbots, arguing they deserve licensing fees and stronger copyright protection.
June 05, 2026 Amar Guriro, founder of Pakistan's first AI-powered news platform, says journalism's future rests on human-AI collaboration to improve reporting while preserving editorial oversight.
June 05, 2026 Global Media Brief reviews pressures reshaping journalism, press freedom, AI and platform power, and reports BBC's Emmy, 60 Minutes turmoil and Taiwan's protest.
June 05, 2026 At the World News Media Congress in Marseille, publishers discussed how generative AI is altering newsroom workflows, audience engagement and content licensing.
June 04, 2026 Journalists in conflict zones face rising danger as combatants, states and militias increasingly target independent reporting to control narratives.