Minister says man who harassed Shahzeb Khanzada identified Human Rights groups urge U.S. to press Saudi Arabia on press freedom Major X disruption exposes newsroom dependence on single platforms Palestinian journalist wounded during West Bank operation Top ARY News official criticizes double-faced journalism Myanmar junta targets media outlet as contributor remains jailed Belarus adds former Intex-Press journalists to extremist list Benazir Shah targeted by AI video as Shahzeb Khanzada faces backlash Shahzeb Khanzada, Shahbaz Gill clash intensifies on X Amar Guriro joins Saga Digital AI after leaving Independent Urdu Minister says man who harassed Shahzeb Khanzada identified Human Rights groups urge U.S. to press Saudi Arabia on press freedom Major X disruption exposes newsroom dependence on single platforms Palestinian journalist wounded during West Bank operation Top ARY News official criticizes double-faced journalism Myanmar junta targets media outlet as contributor remains jailed Belarus adds former Intex-Press journalists to extremist list Benazir Shah targeted by AI video as Shahzeb Khanzada faces backlash Shahzeb Khanzada, Shahbaz Gill clash intensifies on X Amar Guriro joins Saga Digital AI after leaving Independent Urdu

Federal government overturns PEMRA order

 JournalismPakistan.com |  Published 3 years ago

Join our WhatsApp channel

Federal government overturns PEMRA order

ISLAMABAD—Electronic media regulator PEMRA's decision to ban broadcasting of Imran Khan's speech was reversed an hour later by the federal government.

PEMRA had ordered banning the broadcast of Khan's speech and press conferences on satellite TV networks. It saw them as "hateful, slanderous, vilifying and unwarranted statements" against the country's leadership and state institutions.

However, the federal government later directed PEMRA to remove the ban by applying Section 5.

Federal Information Minister Maryam Aurangzeb said that Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif had instructed PEMRA to end the prohibition.

Section 5 of the PEMRA Ordinance allows the federal government to suspend the powers of authority in certain circumstances, the minister said.

Photo credit: moib.gov.pk

 

 

Dive Deeper

Shahzeb Khanzada, Shahbaz Gill clash intensifies on X

Shahzeb Khanzada, Shahbaz Gill clash intensifies on X

 November 17, 2025: A heated exchange between Shahzeb Khanzada and Shahbaz Gill on X escalates after a viral mall confrontation involving a member of the public, underscoring rising hostility and polarization in Pakistan’s media sphere.

Newsroom
Human Rights groups urge U.S. to press Saudi Arabia on press freedom

Human Rights groups urge U.S. to press Saudi Arabia on press freedom

 November 18, 2025 Human rights groups urge U.S. officials to press Saudi Arabia on releasing jailed journalists and reforming media restrictions during Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's Washington visit.


Major X disruption exposes newsroom dependence on single platforms

Major X disruption exposes newsroom dependence on single platforms

 November 18, 2025 A major X outage on November 18 disrupted newsroom workflows, exposed platform dependence, and created openings for misinformation as media outlets scrambled to shift distribution channels.


Palestinian journalist wounded during West Bank operation

Palestinian journalist wounded during West Bank operation

 November 18, 2025 A Palestinian journalist was wounded during an Israeli operation in the West Bank, highlighting growing safety risks and rising operational pressures for media crews on the ground.


Myanmar junta targets media outlet as contributor remains jailed

Myanmar junta targets media outlet as contributor remains jailed

 November 18, 2025 Myanmar’s junta charges AAMIJ News under its election law as a contributor Myat Thu Kyaw, remains imprisoned, deepening concerns over press freedom and escalating media repression.


Belarus adds former Intex-Press journalists to extremist list

Belarus adds former Intex-Press journalists to extremist list

 November 18, 2025 Belarus adds four former Intex-Press journalists to its extremist list as courts uphold house arrests and fines, raising fresh concerns over media freedom and government repression.


Popular Stories