Pakistan: TV journalist victim of online harassment campaign

Journalist Gharidah Farooqi has been victim of a malicious online harassment campaign for doing her job in Pakistan. The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) joins the Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists (PFUJ) in condemning the targeted online abuse against journalists and urges authorities to take immediate action to guarantee journalists’ safety and bring harassers to justice.

Gharidah Farooqi

Gharida Farooqi came under fire on social media after tweeting about the New Zealand shooter. Her words were taken out of context and a vicious online campaign against her was initiated. She received hundreds of insults and threats, including some calling for her murder.

PFUJ President, GM Jamali, said: “PFUJ will support female journalists who suffer from online violence to take legal actions against their abusers. We call on the government to address this issue urgently and bring those who are openly threatening journalists to justice”.

PFUJ will also organise a series of workshops on online safety and digital journalism ethics for journalists to ensure that they are safe when publishing online, but also to help them to understand their responsibility to check the authenticity of the content they post online,” Jamali added. 

In 2017, the IFJ launched the Byte Back campaign to raise awareness on the increasing cases of online harassment against journalists all over the world. In 2018, the IFJ also launched the #DontTroll Campaign to denounce online trolling/harassment and its effects on women journalists.

IFJ General Secretary Anthony Bellanger said: “The IFJ takes online harassment very seriously. Facing attacks and threats can never be part of journalists’ work. We demand authorities to take urgent action to protect journalists from online abuse and urge social media companies to assume their responsibility on preventing online harassment. The UN Convention on the Protection of Journalists that the IFJ is fighting for could play an essential to achieve this

For more information, please contact IFJ on +32 2 235 22 16

The IFJ represents more than 600,000 journalists in 146 countries

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