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 Nigerian travel journalist detained in Benin on terrorism charges since January Poynter opens 2026 Leadership Academy for Women in Media Dawn apologizes after AI editing prompt mistakenly published in business story

PEMRA warns Roze TV

 JournalismPakistan.com |  Published 9 years ago

Join our WhatsApp channel

PEMRA warns Roze TV

ISLAMABAD - For airing what the electronic media's regulatory body PEMRA said were "highly objectionable and anti-state remarks" of a Taliban leader, Roze Television received a warning Friday.


The channel's reporter covering the terrorist attack on Bacha Khan University this week quoted the Tehreek-i-Taliban leader in his report that violated PEMRA laws, the authority said.


The objectionable part that went on air was: "TTP's central spokesman Muhammad Khurasani has condemned the incident....we consider attack on non-military educational institutions as being against Shariah....this is what the spokesman said. He also said that action would be taken against the commander who used Taliban's name to accept responsibility."


PEMRA said the broadcast was a tacit invitation to terrorists to attack military-run schools and installations which is not only against the spirit of Zarb-i-Azab but also against the Constitution of Pakistan, PEMRA rules and the Code of Conduct 2015.


The warning said the channel's managers should remain careful and ensure no such content is broadcast in future. It also asked them to install time-delay mechanism.


 

Explore Further

Newsroom
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.


OSCE hosts Central Asia Media Conference on Sustainability and Press Freedom

OSCE hosts Central Asia Media Conference on Sustainability and Press Freedom

 November 14, 2025 OSCE hosts the 25th Central Asia Media Conference in Tashkent, focusing on media sustainability, resilience, regulatory challenges, and cross-border cooperation for independent journalism.


Popular Stories