Media's Role in Pakistan's Power Politics
Pakistan has been set on fire by
audio-visual leaks of sorts. While the politicians and the civil-military
bureaucracy are at each other's throats, there is a dark horse in this scramble
for power which, as they say in the cricket terminology, is playing on both
sides of the wicket. This often underestimated player in the game of thrones is
none other than Pakistan's print and electronic media. There is a third contender
though – the so-called social media that is challenging the dominance of the
traditional media conglomerates that have played the role of power manipulators
since 1947. Nothing jilts the Pakistani media houses more than the free-flying
rocket known as social media. Just imagine the frustration of Pakistan's
leading newspapers and news channels! Social media has robbed them of their
monopoly on scandal, sleaze, and sizzling news. A leading English-language
newspaper, headquartered in Karachi, now publishes only 1500 copies from
its Islamabad office. The ranking of
established TV news channels is going down because people like me can watch the
speeches of the banned politicians on their androids. Besides political
speeches, they can also watch, on YouTube, popular TV dramas, food recipes, Kay
Parker's " Taboo", and excerpts from "The Perfumed Garden".
These masterpieces, to the utter frustration of the media sharks, cannot be
shown on their TV channels or printed in their newspapers. So much for the very
welcome advent of social media.
The first failed coup d'état in Pakistan was
masterminded by the so-called Pakistan Times Gang. It
included Faiz Ahmed Faiz, editor-in-chief of the Pakistan Times, and Sajjad
Zaheer, another journalist who was on the editorial board of the Pakistan
Times. Faiz and Zaheer were both avowed communists. Ostensibly, the Rawalpindi
Conspiracy, as it was known, later on, was led by Major-General Akbar Khan,
supported by a cabal of 11 disgruntled army officers. However, we know that
Akbar Khan was used as a cover by the
Soviet-sponsored Communist Party of Pakistan – Faiz and Zaheer were the actual
brains behind the conspiracy.
According to writer
Hasan Zaheer, there were three main causes of the Rawalpindi conspiracy: 1)
General discontent of Pakistani army officers with the performance of PM
Liaquat Ali Khan's government; 2) The continuing presence of British officers
in the Pakistan army, and; 3) Discontent with the government's handling of the
first Kashmir war with India. However, the reasons cited by Hasan Zaheer were also a
cover for the consumption of General Tariq and his army associates. The real
purpose was to pave the way for the emergence of a pro-Soviet government in
Pakistan. Pakistan, under the Liaquat regime, was veering towards the U.S.
The Pakistan Times
Gang, though exposed in the wake of the Rawalpindi Conspiracy Case, continued
to play a dominant role throughout Ayub, Yahya, and Zulfiqar Bhutto’s rule. It
played the shots under the umbrella of Ayub’s infamous National Press Trust
which was retained by the Yahya and Bhutto governments till laid to rest
somewhere in the early 1990s.
Presently, Pakistan's print and electronic media are held hostage to the whims and business interests of three leading media houses. Two of these media houses are owned by the Seth families who have their fingers in different industries and trade concerns also. The Haroons, owning the Dawn group, trace back their ancestry to the time when Sheikh Mujib Ur Rehman was on the payroll of Haroon's insurance company. The Lakhanis, owning the Express Newsgroup, also run many commercial enterprises. The Jang-Geo group is a power broker in its own right. It runs a dedicated intelligence unit to hobnob with the other power brokers in the country. Then there is a new entrant-the Sama news network, owned by the famous wheeler and dealer, and land grabbed the Aleem Khan.
How do we describe the role of all these media houses and their respective media persons in the power play? A search carried out by me revealed that most of the leading journalists and TV anchors on the payroll of different media houses do not possess adequate educational qualifications and professional expertise to comment on national and International affairs. The majority of them are just graduates or degree holders from relatively unknown foreign universities. The same is true with Pakistani civil and military bureaucrats.
Whereas you will find a
large number of books written by the Indian generals, civil bureaucrats, and
journalists on Indo-Pakistan wars and national and International issues, tell
me the number of Pakistani authors. It is because, as some people say jokingly,
the Pakistani intelligentsia is dumb due to the over consumption of meat,
particularly beef.
Coming back
specifically to the Pakistani media persons; have you read any worthwhile
research paper or meaningful analysis by anyone of them? All you come across is
Tik - Tok type Tweets and discussions on the TV channels. I have my doubt that
the op-eds attributed to some Pakistani anchors, appearing in the Washington
Post and other leading International newspapers, are written by them. It is
because their writings, published in the International media, do not
corroborate with the intellectual level displayed by them on their respective
Pakistani news channels. So, how do you
describe the Sophists?
In ancient Greece, the
Sophists were considered orators, public speakers, and mouths for hire. They
were known for giving a spin to their speech – a skill that came to be known
as rhetoric. And they were respected, feared, and hated. The Pakistani Sophists
are presently hairsplitting the difference between "conspiracy" and
"intervention", and interpreting, according to the philosophy of their
sponsors, if "cipher" and " transcript" are the same thing,
or have different connotations. A contest of words is their forte – one
person's words against another's.
Saleem Akhtar Malik
1 October 2022
The author is a Pakistan Army veteran who regularly writes on national and international affairs, defence, military history, and military technology. His talks on these subjects are aired on his YouTube Channel "The Observation Post". His blog "Sam1953.blogspot.com" features his articles. Tweets @saleemakhtar53.

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