The JournalismPakistan Global Media Brief | Edition 18 | May 1, 2026 Arrests, airstrikes, and algorithms: How April reshaped journalism worldwide Law, pressure, and layoffs: Pakistan's media in April 2026 Asia-Pacific press freedom falls as legal pressure deepens Global press freedom hits historic low, RSF reports Zambia cancels RightsCon 2026 days before start Dawn CEO flags new era of media pressure in Pakistan Journalists at war with themselves: A crisis no one will win Belarusian journalist Andrzej Poczobut freed in US brokered swap Press freedom declines amid aggressive PECA enforcement: report Matiullah Jan and the cost of speaking about press freedom CBS News replaces London chief amid Gaza coverage row Maldives raid on Adhadhu intensifies press pressure Tunisia detains journalist, escalating press crackdown Amar Guriro selected for global nuclear reporting group The JournalismPakistan Global Media Brief | Edition 18 | May 1, 2026 Arrests, airstrikes, and algorithms: How April reshaped journalism worldwide Law, pressure, and layoffs: Pakistan's media in April 2026 Asia-Pacific press freedom falls as legal pressure deepens Global press freedom hits historic low, RSF reports Zambia cancels RightsCon 2026 days before start Dawn CEO flags new era of media pressure in Pakistan Journalists at war with themselves: A crisis no one will win Belarusian journalist Andrzej Poczobut freed in US brokered swap Press freedom declines amid aggressive PECA enforcement: report Matiullah Jan and the cost of speaking about press freedom CBS News replaces London chief amid Gaza coverage row Maldives raid on Adhadhu intensifies press pressure Tunisia detains journalist, escalating press crackdown Amar Guriro selected for global nuclear reporting group
Logo
Janu
Making Sense of the Media World

Thank you JP!

 JournalismPakistan.com |  Published: 23 October 2012 |  Z B Saigol

Join our WhatsApp channel

Thank you JP!
This article celebrates the third anniversary of JournalismPakistan.com and acknowledges its contribution to media in Pakistan. The author shares their positive experience as a contributor and praises the professionalism of its founders.

KARACHI: I gave up on Pakistan's media and what they stand for long ago. Frankly their unprofessional attitude and lack of ethics sickens me.

Therefore, it was with whopping degree of skepticism that I considered JournalismPakistan.com when it was first referred to me by a former colleague, a decent sort of chap who for a short while worked at CNBC and whom I shall refer to as MS.

"It is not your run of the mill website on media," he had said, "It's run by Stephen Manuel and Imran Naeem Ahmad." "Who the hell are they?" I asked. MS was miffed if not downright offended. "Okay, I'll have a look at it," I said and promptly forgot.

I met the fellow a year later and one of the first questions he asked me was, "So what is your opinion of JP?" "Is that HP's younger brother or older?" I asked in my typical style. "Saigol Sahib," he said frustrated, "Aaap to kissi aur ko thora sa bhi credit dainay kay leeyay teyar hi nahi." He flipped open his laptop and had the website open in a moment.

"Have a look," he pleaded. I capitulated reluctantly. A few minutes became half an hour. I looked up and saw MS had an "I told you so" smile playing at the corner of his lips. "Don't look so smug," I said vindictively, "It has a couple of mistakes in it." He came over.

"Here...." I pointed out where two words had not been separated, "and here..." I said indicating where the word 'their' had been spelled as 'there'. "It is human to err..." he said philosophically and then kept quiet. I waited a moment before I said: "Okay it's the best media website I have come across... period. I don't mean just in Pakistan, but anywhere.

I'm impressed… Who are these guys? They are doing a good job." MS smiled happily. "Steve used to be my boss in CNBC," he said, "Real journalist... and Imran is his friend and colleague, a career journalist based in Islamabad. Both are senior journalists with international experience. "I like what they are doing.

They seem to have it covered entirely....the gamut of the journalism scene. Features, breaking news, information, services... so who funds them?" "Self-financed," MS said. "That means passion is the engine making the machine run here," I murmured and he nodded. "Is there any way you can introduce me to them?" MS nodded again.

It's been over a year now since I have been writing for JournalismPakistan.com and I can tell you I have enjoyed being a contributor. Both Steve and Imran have informed me that I go overboard sometimes, but that's just me. I have been told my stories or observations always evict criticism. But that's me again, I guess.

I'm still to meet Imran and I'll do that when I go to Islamabad or when he comes here. With Steve it’s mostly Facebook. But I know both of them well or I think I do. I wish Steve, Imran and JournalismPakistan.com the very best on the third birthday of the website. May you have many more.

And JP...thanks for providing me an avenue where I can really vent my frustration and say what I want to. Media in Pakistan would be poorer without you. Thanks.

Key Points

  • Author expresses skepticism about Pakistani media.
  • Positive assessment of JournalismPakistan.com as a leading media site.
  • Acknowledges the professionalism of founders Stephen Manuel and Imran Naeem Ahmad.
  • Highlights the importance of independent media funding.
  • Celebrates the platform's third anniversary and its contribution to journalism.

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

PNP launches nationwide media quiz

PNP launches nationwide media quiz

 April 26, 2026: PNP launches a nationwide online quiz for World Press Freedom Day 2026 to promote media rights, ethical journalism and media literacy; winners announced May 3.

Newsroom
Arrests, airstrikes, and algorithms: How April reshaped journalism worldwide

Arrests, airstrikes, and algorithms: How April reshaped journalism worldwide

 May 01, 2026 April 2026 saw arrests, airstrikes, legal cases and algorithmic changes that intensified threats to journalism, leading to censorship, criminalization and economic pressure worldwide.


Asia-Pacific press freedom falls as legal pressure deepens

Asia-Pacific press freedom falls as legal pressure deepens

 April 30, 2026 RSF warns Asia-Pacific press freedom is deteriorating; over half the region is classed difficult or worse and Pakistan faces sustained legal and regulatory pressure on its media.


Global press freedom hits historic low, RSF reports

Global press freedom hits historic low, RSF reports

 April 30, 2026 Reporters Without Borders says global press freedom is at its lowest in 25 years, with over half of countries now rated 'difficult' or 'very serious'.


Zambia cancels RightsCon 2026 days before start

Zambia cancels RightsCon 2026 days before start

 April 30, 2026 Zambia cancelled RightsCon 2026 days before the Lusaka event, citing values and diplomatic protocols, prompting global concern among rights groups.


Belarusian journalist Andrzej Poczobut freed in US brokered swap

Belarusian journalist Andrzej Poczobut freed in US brokered swap

 April 29, 2026 Belarusian journalist Andrzej Poczobut was freed in a U.S.-brokered prisoner swap in late April 2026, ending his long detention on political charges.


Popular Stories