In a first, Pakistan allocates $3.5 million for health insurance of working journalists

Pakistani journalists broadcast live news from the Supreme Court in Islamabad on June 28, 2018. (AFP/File)
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Updated 09 June 2023
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In a first, Pakistan allocates $3.5 million for health insurance of working journalists

  • The information minister says it was her goal to materialize this ‘very important step’
  • Pakistan’s journalist fraternity appreciates the government for making the allocation

ISLAMABAD: The government on Friday announced an allocation of Rs1 billion ($3.5 million) for the health insurance of working journalists in the new budget, confirmed the information minister in a Twitter post.

Pakistan’s finance minister Ishaq Dar presented the fiscal plan for the cash-strapped economy with a total outlay of Rs14.46 trillion ($50.4 billion), targeting a 6.5 percent fiscal deficit and allocating around 50 percent to interest payments.

Grappling with a balance of payment crisis, currency depreciation, and record inflation that hit 38 percent in May, the government has set a 3.5 percent GDP growth target in the next financial year, an ambitious figure compared to the 0.29 percent growth rate in the outgoing year.

“Delighted to announce that an allocation has been made in the budget for the health insurance of working journalists,” information minister Marriyum Aurangzeb announced in a Twitter post.

“For the first time ever, Rs 1 billion has been allocated [for this purpose] in the budget for FY 2023-24.”

Aurangzeb thanked Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif and finance minister Dar for taking this “very important measure,” adding it was her goal to arrange this facility for media people, especially in the current economic circumstances.

The Karachi Press Club also appreciated the government’s decision to make the allocation in a statement.

“We thank the prime minister of Pakistan and the federal minister for Information for the step, but the federal government should also take notice of the ongoing layoffs, salary cuts, and non-payment of salaries across the media industries,” it said.

The government has also tried to provide relief to its employees by introducing financial allowances for its officials and increasing the pensions of retired officials.

Dar also announced an increase in the minimum wage of workers living in the Pakistani capital, Islamabad, from Rs25,000 to Rs30,000.


Pakistan bans ex-army officer, YouTuber Adil Raja under Anti-Terrorism Act

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Pakistan bans ex-army officer, YouTuber Adil Raja under Anti-Terrorism Act

  • Pakistan interior ministry says Raja misused online platforms to promote, facilitate anti-state narratives
  • Raja, a UK-based YouTuber-commentator, is a harsh critic of Pakistan’s government, powerful military

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s federal government has listed a former army officer and pro-Imran Khan YouTuber-commentator Adil Raja as a proscribed person in the Anti-Terrorism Act for pushing anti-state narratives, the interior ministry said this week. 

Raja, who is now a UK-based blogger who broadcasts political commentary on Pakistan, is severely critical of the government and the military in his YouTube vlogs. Critics also accuse him of being biased in favor of former prime minister Imran Khan. 

Pakistani officials have accused Raja of running propaganda campaigns from abroad in the past. Pakistan Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi met British High Commissioner Jane Marriott in Islamabad this month and formally handed over extradition documents for Raja. The UK government has so far not commented on the development. 

In a notification issued on Saturday, the interior ministry said the government believes Raja has been demonstrating involvement in activities “posing a serious threat to the security, integrity and public order of Pakistan.”

“He has consistently misused online platforms to promote, facilitate and amplify anti-state narratives and propaganda associated with proscribed terrorist organizations, thereby acting in a manner prejudicial to the sovereignty and defense of Pakistan,” a notification by the interior ministry said. 

“Now, therefore in exercise of the powers conferred by section 11EE of the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997, the Federal Government is pleased to direct to list Mr. Adil Farooq Raja, s/o Umer Farooq Raja, in the Fourth Schedule to the said Act as a proscribed person for the purposes of the said Act.”

Section 11EE empowers the government to list a person under the Fourth Schedule if there are reasonable grounds to believe that he/she is involved in “terrorism” or is an activist, office bearer or an associate of an organization kept under observation under the same Act, or is suspected to be concerned with any organization suspected to be involved in “terrorism.”

Those placed on the Fourth Schedule by the government are subjected to intense scrutiny and movement restrictions.

In a post on social media platform X, Raja denied any wrongdoing, saying the government had banned him after failing to extradite him from the UK.

“This designation is not a consequence of any crime, but a direct reprisal for my practice of journalism,” he wrote. 

Raja was also among two retired army officers who were convicted and sentenced under the Army Act, and for violations of the provisions of the Official Secrets Act in 2023.

 The former army officer was given 14 years of rigorous imprisonment by a military court. 

Khan, a former cricket star who served as Pakistan’s prime minister from 2018 to 2022, has been in jail since August 2023 on multiple charges his party says are politically motivated.

Despite incarceration, he remains the country’s most popular opposition figure, commanding one of the largest digital followings in South Asia. 

Overseas Pakistanis in particular drive sustained online activism on platforms such as YouTube and X, campaigning for his release and alleging human-rights abuses against Khan and his supporters, claims the Pakistani state rejects.