Pakistan pressed over charges against journalists

Pakistani photojournalists hold their cameras and shout slogans during a demonstration to mark World Press Freedom Day in Lahore on May 3, 2023. (AFP/File)
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Updated 15 June 2023
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Pakistan pressed over charges against journalists

  • Two Pakistani journalists living in US charged over May 9 protests after ex-PM Khan’s arrest
  • A complaint accuses both journalists of conspiracy against the military, supporting terrorism

WASHINGTON: Reporters Without Borders on Wednesday demanded that Pakistani prosecutors dismiss accusations against two journalists that could theoretically carry the death penalty, adding to US criticism of a crackdown.

Two prominent Pakistani journalists living in the United States, Wajahat Khan and Shaheen Sehbai, were charged over nationwide protests that swept Pakistan on May 9 after the arrest of former prime minister Imran Khan.

A complaint accuses the two of a conspiracy against the military and in support of terrorism, saying that protesters were looking at the social media accounts of the two journalists and of two former officers who are critical of the army.

“Make no mistake — the sole purpose of this ludicrous complaint, which arbitrarily associates the names of Wajahat Khan and Shaheen Sehbai with those of rebel ex-army officers, is to intimidate the two journalists into silence,” said Daniel Bastard, the head of Reporters Without Borders’ Asia-Pacific desk.

“In view of the absurdity of the supposed incriminating evidence, we call on the Islamabad prosecutor’s office to dismiss this complaint, which should never have been received.”

US State Department spokesman Matthew Miller earlier voiced alarm over Pakistan conducting military trials over involvement in the May 9 protests.

The United States will “urge Pakistani authorities to respect democratic principles and the rule of law for all people as enshrined in the country’s constitution,” Miller said.

Wajahat Khan, a well-known freelance journalist, said that he has received threats to his mother in Pakistan.

“It was from a very highly placed official. I’m not taking that lightly,” he told AFP.

In a statement, Khan called the suggestions that his social media content triggered violence and terrorism “shocking, baseless, and absurd.”

“I am a proud citizen of Pakistan. Perhaps one of the proudest,” he said.

“I’ve dedicated my career reporting from Pakistan’s frontlines, deployed with the same military that these charges falsely claim I’m trying to divide.”

Sehbai, the former editor of The News, said that Pakistanis had turned to social media due to a clampdown on traditional press and that authorities were trying to clamp down on voices from abroad.

Imran Khan, who was ousted in a parliamentary vote and is looking for a political comeback, was locked up for three days as prosecutors accused him of corruption.


Pakistan detains five men deported from Sharjah for using fake UK visas

Updated 06 December 2025
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Pakistan detains five men deported from Sharjah for using fake UK visas

  • The group was taken into custody at Lahore airport and handed to the Anti-Human Smuggling Circle
  • FIA says the five men obtained forged UK visas through agents after traveling to Malaysia this year

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani authorities detained five citizens at Lahore airport after they were deported from Sharjah for attempting to travel to the United Kingdom on forged British visas, the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) said on Saturday.

The five men had initially traveled from Lahore to Malaysia earlier this year on visit visas, the agency said.

After their stay in Malaysia, it added, they allegedly tried to fly onward to the UK from Sharjah using counterfeit documents obtained through agents.

“Five Pakistani passengers were deported from Sharjah for possessing fake British visas,” the FIA said in its statement. “Upon arrival at Lahore airport, the deported passengers were taken into custody.”

Pakistan has tightened its crackdown on illegal immigration and human smuggling in recent years after a series of deadly boat tragedies involving its citizens attempting to reach Europe.

In July, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said the government was targeting organized criminal networks and urging the public to use safe and legal pathways for overseas employment.

He said the state was expanding job opportunities at home and abroad but warned that irregular migration routes were dangerous and violated national and international law.

The FIA said all five men had been transferred to the Anti-Human Smuggling Circle in Lahore for further investigation.

According to its statement, the forged travel documents were acquired with the assistance of intermediaries, leading authorities in the United Arab Emirates to deny them entry and deport them to Pakistan.

The FIA said the inquiry into the visa fraud and the agents involved was ongoing.