Pak Institute for Peace Studies (PIPS) launched an initiative aimed at enhancing bilateral media contacts and co-operation between Afghan and Pakistani journalists and media organisation by holding Afghanistan-Pakistan Media Dialogue at Kabul on February 21-22, 2011. PIPS has partnered with The Killid Group (TKG) of Afghanistan to improve co-operation between the electronic and print media of Pakistan and Afghanistan and arrange training for journalists to improve the media’s capacity to cover complex issues with a view to enhance the qualitative/quantitative reporting on regional issues. The International Media Support (IMS) has offered financial support and training expertise for the initiative.
Senior Pakistani journalists from all parts of the country from the print and electronic media were shortlisted for the Kabul dialogue. They included: Mr. Zaffar Abbas (Dawn Group), Mr. Jawwad Nazeer (Geo TV Network), Mr. Ejaz Haider (The Friday Times), Mr. Shahzada Zulfiqar (Pakistan Today, Herald, AFP), Ms. Asma Shirazi (SAMA TV), Mr. Shafqatullah (FM 103), Mr. Adnan Rehmat (Intermedia), Mr. Muhammad Riaz Khan (Nawa-i-Waqt, Peshawar), Mr. Zahir Shah (Dawn News, Peshawar), Mr. Amir Zia (Newsline, Karachi), Mr Aamir Khakwani (Daily Express, Lahore), Mr. Hassan Khan (Khyber TV), Ms. Mehmal Sarfraz (Daily Times), Mr. Najib Ahmad (FM 99), and Mr. Bilal Ahmed (Dawn News, Peshawar). PIPS was represented by its Director Mr. Muhammad Amir Rana, Mr. Mujtaba Rathore and Mr. Najam U Din. Around two dozen Afghan journalists from the print and electronic media also attended the media dialogue. The event presented a rare occasion for candid exchange of views. In deliberations over two days, journalists from the two countries discussed challenges, possibilities and potential for collaboration.
The media dialogue was launched by Afghan Deputy Minister of Culture and Information Mohammad Mobarez Rashedi who hailed the initiative and pledged every support. In his message read out at the media conference, Afghan President Hamid Karazai called the initiative “a great opportunity not just for the two countries but for everyone.”
On the occasion, Mr. Shahir Ahmed Zahine, chairman of The Killid Group (TKG), said the initiative aimed at fostering collaboration between journalists in the two countries with a view to raise voices for moderation and peace and to stand up against extremism. He spoke about the need for better understanding between the people of the two countries and the role that the media could play in that regard.
Finn Rasmussen of International Media Support said that dialogue really was the operative word for the initiative. This dialogue would determine the strategy of how journalists from the two countries work together on interesting and relevant stories, he said.
The first session of the media conference in Kabul focused on the need for cooperation and media’s role in that. Discussing the need for bilateral cooperation between journalists and media houses, journalists from the two countries agreed that the media had a role to play in the circumstances but journalists from the two countries had to have a joint strategy. Anything done unilaterally will not work bilaterally, they emphasised. It was stressed that media should have ownership of the cooperation and must make a conscious effort to distinguish between truth and propaganda. It was agreed that without more communication the journalists would not be able to arrive at a joint strategy. The participants said that as a first step media houses of the two countries could post their correspondents in the other country to improve coverage. The participants highlighted that media was not one entire unity in neither Afghanistan nor Pakistan. It was agreed that journalists from one country could not expect their colleagues from the other to see events and developments through the prism of Afghan or Pakistani national interest. It was acknowledged that cross-border reporting always presented challenges which were compounded by taking a nationalist view of things. It was discussed that media coverage in either country about incidents and developments in the other lacked a regional perspective and often followed stereotypes and negative images. It was noted that instead of relying on each other’s media for reporting development in the other country, the two countries learned about each other through western wire services, which often did not have enough regional perspective or failed to cater to the needs of detailed information of the people in the two countries. Emphasising the role of the media, however, the participants said that expectations should be realistic and that when all the forces in the world were struggling to achieve peace in the region there were limits to what the Pak-Afghan media could achieve. They said that the media’s job was to report the facts in public interest and leave it for the people to decide. They said that the media’s could contribute to dispel impressions developed by operating from a distance.
Afghan Minister of Culture and Information Mr. Makhdoom Raheen who opened the proceedings of the conference on the second day said that Afghan doors and hearts were open for a healthy relationship with Pakistan at every level.
In session three in-depth discussion were held on challenges of security for the journalists, specifically in covering conflict stories and those with cross-border dimensions. It was considered whether the journalists were skilled to avoid or overcome threats to their safety. The session also considered ways to minimise risks. The participants said that some security challenges in Pakistan were shared and others specific. The Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) were off-limits to Pakistani journalists, who also spoke about threats such as sectarian tensions and political pressures. The Afghan journalists talked about the difficulties they faced in cross-border reporting. They said that in Afghanistan there is a good law on freedom of expression but implementation had been problematic. They said security forces determined how journalists should get information. They said at times Afghan journalists were accused of having links with the Taliban, simply because they had information that the security forces did not have. Some pressure from politicians and drug mafia was also highlighted. Journalists said that they faced threats for reporting crime, religious issues, love marriages, and reporting on casualty figures or who caused those casualties. The participants said that the effect of the threats was that they felt unable to report on important issues. The participants said that some of these threats could be reduced by inculcating among the civilians the importance of media and others by the journalists respecting culture and tradition.
Session four focused on identifying measures aiming to minimise the obstacles identified in session two regarding the different levels of professional skills among journalists/media houses that agree to carry together the research/coverage of a story. It was pointed out that journalism teaching and training capacity was lacking in Afghanistan and someone needed to invest in that. Rural areas lack basic infrastructure, Internet is expansive and unreliable. The Afghan participants said the market was small and dependence on donors was there. They said although the donors did not dictate to the media organizations in terms of content, these organizations would not be able to survive if the donors stopped funding. They considered mutual arrangements between Pakistani and Afghan media houses on sharing news items, articles, photographs and video clips on each others websites, etc. and possibilities of translating and using each others reports. Some participants said that the two governments should also be encouraged to facilitate media contacts and collaboration. Journalists from the two countries also suggested ways on how stories that hold interest for people in the two countries may be researched and covered jointly.
The concluding session focused on lessons learned and the way forward. The participants recognized that the Pak-Afghan media had a role to play in the region. They noted that the will to enhance collaboration existed and the challenge was how to build and channelize it so that it leads to concrete results. They said that obstacles had been identified but there was a consensus that they could be overcome and needed to be overcome in order to ensure cooperation aimed at promoting moderation and achieving regional peace. The media dialogue concluded with a joint press statement.
At the conclusion of the conference, a joint Advisory Board was selected with seven journalists from Pakistan and an equal number from Afghanistan. The 14-member Advisory Board would manage the process of implementing the initiative and will select applicants from the two countries for trainings.
The conference in Kabul was the first step in a three-year program that aims to encourage and strengthen a strong working relationship between journalists and media organizations in the two countries.
The initiative was launched because it was felt that while some Pakistani journalists from the Pashtun belt have some links with Afghan journalists, journalists from the Pakistani mainland and its mainstream media have very poor relations with their Afghan counterparts. Decades of operating from a distance has done little to remove misunderstandings and propaganda.
In the six-month pilot phase, the initiative focuses on joint research and publication of news reports which hold interest for audience in both countries.
Subject to successful implementation of the pilot phase, the initiative may be turned into a three-year program that will create a Cooperation Fund and training opportunities that will facilitate bilateral cooperation to cover complex cross-border issues.