Why publishers want AI companies to pay Amar Guriro: Journalism's future is human-AI partnership The JournalismPakistan Global Media Brief | Edition 23 | June 5, 2026 As AI reshapes news, publishers seek a sustainable future Every frame at a cost: The safety crisis facing Pakistan's camerapersons Why journalists are increasingly targeted in conflict zones What the 60 Minutes controversy means for TV journalism 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 Why publishers want AI companies to pay Amar Guriro: Journalism's future is human-AI partnership The JournalismPakistan Global Media Brief | Edition 23 | June 5, 2026 As AI reshapes news, publishers seek a sustainable future Every frame at a cost: The safety crisis facing Pakistan's camerapersons Why journalists are increasingly targeted in conflict zones What the 60 Minutes controversy means for TV journalism 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
Logo
Janu
Journalism Pakistan Authority

PEMRA to PBA: No airing of programs that exploit poor children

 JournalismPakistan.com |  Published: 22 May 2015

Join our WhatsApp channel

PEMRA to PBA: No airing of programs that exploit poor children
PEMRA has warned broadcasters against airing programs that exploit poor children, particularly in morning shows. The authority emphasizes the need for compliance to uphold moral standards in media.

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority (PEMRA) has directed Pakistan Broadcasters Association (PBA) through a letter that no program should be aired that exploits ‘poor children,’ especially in the morning shows. “It has been observed with grave concern that... morning shows [are being aired] in collaboration with some NGOs, whereby they exhibit the exchange of children of poor families among the rich couples in lieu of money,” the letter said. A PEMRA spokesperson told Dawn that the advice has been issued after it was noticed that some talk shows, especially morning shows, were displaying poor children as commodities and asking the rich people present on the show to come forward and help them. “No programme or advertisement shall be aired which is against cultural values, morality and good manners,” the advisory said, warning broadcasters that failure to comply with this directive could result in the suspension or revocation of their licence under Section 30 of the Pemra Ordinance 2002. “The authority feels that if any channel or individual wants to do philanthropic work, they should not try and take advantage of it, or should conduct the same service off-air, or maybe just feature the philanthropic individuals to showcase the welfare work they do for poor children,” the spokesperson said.

Key Points

  • PEMRA directed PBA to halt exploitation of poor children in media.
  • Programs showcasing poor children as commodities are prohibited.
  • Non-compliance may result in license suspension or revocation.
  • Philanthropic efforts should not exploit children's hardships.
  • Broadcasters should feature welfare work off-air instead.

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
Why publishers want AI companies to pay

Why publishers want AI companies to pay

 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.


Amar Guriro: Journalism's future is human-AI partnership

Amar Guriro: Journalism's future is human-AI partnership

 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.


The JournalismPakistan Global Media Brief | Edition 23 | June 5, 2026

The JournalismPakistan Global Media Brief | Edition 23 | June 5, 2026

 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.


As AI reshapes news, publishers seek a sustainable future

As AI reshapes news, publishers seek a sustainable future

 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.


Why journalists are increasingly targeted in conflict zones

Why journalists are increasingly targeted in conflict zones

 June 04, 2026 Journalists in conflict zones face rising danger as combatants, states and militias increasingly target independent reporting to control narratives.


Popular Stories