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IHC to hear plea against closure of Geo News, relegation of channel

The plea also nominates Chairman NAB and PEMRA Chairman Saleem Baig

By Web Desk
March 16, 2020

ISLAMABAD: A petition, submitted in the Islamabad High Court on Monday against the closure of Geo News on cable and the relegation of the channel to lower numbers, has been accepted  for a hearing  on March 17.

Chief Justice Islamabad High Court Justice Athar Minallah will preside over the hearing tomorrow.

The petition had been submitted through Barrister Jahangir Jadoon by Raja Ahsan Mahmood Satti.

The petition has nominated the cabinet secretary as a party to the case, as well as the IT minister and the prime minister's special assistant on information.

The plea also nominates Chairman NAB Javed Iqbal and Pakistan Eletronic Media Regulatory Authority (PEMRA) Chairman Saleem Baig.

Through the petition, it has been argued that the court should declare the act of controlling media 'illegal' and that Geo News should be returned to the channel placement it was on before the arrest of the Jang Geo Group Editor-in-Chief, Mir Shakil-ur-Rahman.

The petitioner has argued that the closure of Geo News is a bid to silence the media and control it, which is against the Constitution.

Those named/made party to the petition should be stopped from harassing the media houses, the petition pleads.

On March 13, cable operators throughout Pakistan started receiving orders to immediately shut down Geo TV's broadcast or relegate the channel to the last numbers.

The instructions were issued right after SAPM Dr Firdous Ashiq Awan concluded her press conference pertaining to the arrest of Jang Geo Group Editor-in-Chief Mir Shakil-ur-Rahman.

It was reported that the closure came following directives from PEMRA, but the PEMRA chairman himself denied he had issued any orders to that effect.

Jang Geo Group Editor-in-Chief arrested by NAB in fake case

NAB had on Thursday arrested the editor-in-chief of the Jang Geo Media Group in connection with property allegedly bought illegally from a government entity more than 34 years ago.

The property was, in fact, bought from a private party and all evidence of this was given to NAB and legal requirements fulfilled, such as duty and taxes.

According to the Group's spokesperson, the editor-in-chief's appearance before NAB was in relation to a call-up notice for the verification of the complaint, yet an arrest was made.

The Islamabad High Court's recent judgment against NAB's violation of the country’s law and a violation of NAB's own rules has been committed, the Group's spokesperson said.