
For the American press, there are important warnings in Pakistan's playbook
Last February, when Pakistan's government shut down mobile phone services on election day to suppress information flow, my newsroom in Lahore went silent. Screens froze mid-sentence, phones lost signal, and the hum of breaking news gave way to an eerie quiet. We had faced blackouts before, but this felt like a rehearsal for something more permanent. Then, just a few weeks ago, a friend at Voice of America texted: 'They just gutted our Urdu service. 50 journalists fired overnight.'
Of course, Pakistan is not America and parallels are not always relevant. But what is happening in Pakistan to the press, free speech and the truth will sooner or later happen in the US as the infections of populism, ideology, hatred and political division are not controlled and redressed. Consider these warnings.
The methods differ — here, they raid offices and jail reporters; there, they employ lawsuits and algorithmic suppression — but the intent is the same: make the truth too costly, too dangerous, or too exhausting to pursue. America's press is not immune to the rot devouring ours; the difference lies only in the speed of decay.
In Pakistan, censorship is a blunt instrument. The state silences reporters with trumped-up charges, jails critics under vague cybercrime laws, and when all else fails, simply pulls the plug on communication channels. Journalists learn to self-censor, making the truth just blurry enough to survive. In America, press erosion wears a different mask, wrapped in the language of free speech and balance. When Florida attempted to challenge New York Times v. Sullivan in 2023 (the ruling that shields journalists from predatory defamation suits) it was a test run. The bill failed, but the war on press freedom continues. Across the US, new 'fake news' laws criminalize documenting protests, and lawsuits drain the resources of newsrooms already on life support. The knock doesn't come at midnight. It comes as a subpoena. Reporters don't flee the country— they just stop covering certain topics. Over half of American journalists now say they avoid stories that might bring legal or online harassment. That is what censorship looks like in a democracy.
A young Pakistani reporter once deleted her corruption story after her mother begged, 'They'll come for us.' How long until American journalists make the same decision?
Dure Akram
But laws are just one weapon. In Pakistan, when the government wants to silence a story, they cut off communication channels. In America, the blackout is algorithmic. Meta's algorithm changes have significantly reduced organic reach for news publishers, making it challenging for them to engage audiences without paid support.
The effect is the same: flood the public with so much junk that truth becomes just another needle in a haystack of noise. Ask your Uber driver where they get their news. If they say TikTok or memes, you're already living Pakistan's playbook. When Pakistan banned YouTube in 2012, extremists flooded WhatsApp with propaganda. When local newsrooms in America die, Facebook groups and YouTube grifters fill the void. The result? The public drowns in lies, and no one remembers how to swim.
Violence against journalists doesn't start with bullets. It starts with words. In Lahore, I've received death threats for writing about blasphemy laws. Colleagues have been sent photoshopped images of their corpses. In Louisville, reporters are doxxed for covering school boards. Assaults on US journalists have risen significantly; as of September 2024, assaults increased by more than 50 percent.
Yet few acknowledge the chilling effect it creates. A young Pakistani reporter once deleted her corruption story after her mother begged, 'They'll come for us.' How long until American journalists make the same decision?
State-backed propaganda doesn't always look like propaganda. In Pakistan, when opposition leaders are arrested, television channels air cooking shows. Newspapers flood their pages with debates over trivialities. America has its version of this. Climate deniers share panels with scientists as if their views hold equal weight. Voter suppression is framed as 'he said, she said.' This isn't balance. It's complicity.
When The New York Times sued OpenAI for unauthorized use of its content, readers funded the fight. The public doesn't crave neutrality; they crave clarity. Stop serving them mush.
So how do you fight back?
You name the rot. When Pakistan's government flooded Twitter with #TraitorMedia hashtags, journalists responded with #BlackoutPakistan, forcing censors onto the defensive. US newsrooms must do the same: call out 'national security' gag orders for what they are: censorship dressed up as patriotism. Tell human stories. My most-read piece this year wasn't a political analysis but the story of why a blind voter had lost hope in the process. Data doesn't stir souls — people do.
And most of all, protect each other. When Kansas police raided the Marion County Record, over 30 news organizations publicly opposed the actions, demonstrating solidarity. Solidarity is armor.
Democracy isn't dying in darkness. It's being smothered in plain sight. It happens when reporters delete stories to keep their families safe. When platforms optimize for outrage instead of truth. When lawsuits become the preferred weapon of the powerful. Pakistani journalists type on burner phones in the dead of night. You still have a free press. The only question is: will you use it?
When the lights go out, the real fight isn't whether journalism will survive. It's who will be brave enough to keep it alive.
- Dure Akram is a Pakistan-based journalist and can be reached at durenayab786@gmail.com. She tweets @dureakram.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Leaders
a day ago
- Leaders
GHF Ex-Contractor Exposes Israeli Brutality against Palestinian Aid Seekers
An American army veteran has exposed the crimes committed by the Israeli military at the aid distribution sites operated by the US and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF). The retired US Army Green Beret and former GHF contractor, Lieutenant Colonel Anthony Aguilar, shared heartbreaking accounts of atrocities committed by Israeli troops against starving Palestinian civilians, including children, near aid hubs. Amir: Victim of Israeli Brutality During an interview with the UnXeptable podcast, Aguilar recounted how the Israeli forces brutally killed an innocent Palestinian child right after receiving food supplies. 'This little boy, his name was Amir, and he was standing with the crowd. But he walks over to me and he puts out his hand. And at first, I thought he wanted more food or something. I felt bad coz I didn't have anything,' Aguilar said. 'But I was like 'oh I have nothing,' and he puts out his hand, so I beckoned him to come to me and said 'come here.' He reaches out and holds my hand and he kisses my hand. He kisses my hand and he says 'shukran' (thank you),' he added. Dire Conditions The US army veteran described Amir's pathetic condition. 'Can you see in this picture this little boy is not wearing shoes. His clothes are falling off him because he is so skinny. I put my hand on his left shoulder and I looked at him and we looked each other in the eyes. I say to him 'people care. You are a human being and people care about you. The world cares',' Aguilar recounted. Anthony Aguilar 'That is not Hamas. That's not a Hamas spider. And I looked at him and said the world cares. And he put down the little food he has, you notice he does not have a box of food. He has half of a bag of rice that he found on the ground, a broken bag, half of a bag of lentils that he found on the ground. And he was thanking us,' he said. Heartbreaking Account 'This little boy walked 12 km just to get there. Look at this boy. When he got there, he thanked us for the remnants and small crumbs that he got. He sets them down on the ground because I was kneeling at this point. And he sets his food down and he places his hands on my face, on my cheeks, with these frail skeleton emaciated hands – dirty – he kissed me and said 'thank you' in English,' the former GHF contractor said. Aguilar went on to recount what happened. 'He collected his items and walked back to the group, and then he was shot at with pepper spray, tear gas, stun grenades and bullets shot at his feet and in the air. He runs away, scared, as they are shooting into this crowd,' he said while struggling to hold back his tears. Killing Palestinian Civilians 'And Palestinian civilians – human beings – are dropping to the ground, getting shot, and Amir was one of them. Amir walked 12 km to get food, got nothing but scraps, thanked us for it and died,' Aguilar added. 'That's what we are doing. That's not the only occasion. That happens every day at some point in the sites. Innocent civilians being shot,' the retired US soldier concluded. Short link : Post Views: 26


Al Arabiya
2 days ago
- Al Arabiya
Breaking: India will buy Russian oil despite Trump's threats: Report
Indian officials have said they would keep purchasing oil from Russia despite the threat of penalties that US President Donald Trump said he would impose, the New York Times reported on Saturday. Reuters could not immediately verify the report.


Saudi Gazette
3 days ago
- Saudi Gazette
US envoy Witkoff visits Gaza aid distribution site as starvation crisis deepens
JERUSALEM — Steve Witkoff, the United States' special envoy to the Middle East, on Friday visited a controversial US-backed aid distribution site in Gaza, one of three such locations near which hundreds of Palestinians have died in recent weeks as they tried to reach scarce food supplies. An Israeli source told CNN on Friday morning that Witkoff had arrived at the aid site in the southern city of Rafah that is run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF). The GHF was created to replace the United Nations' aid role in Gaza and has been widely criticized for failing to improve conditions as the starvation crisis deepens. More than 1,000 Palestinians have been killed by the Israeli military while trying to get food, hundreds of them near GHF sites, according to the UN. The GHF disputes this. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said on Thursday that Witkoff and US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee would travel to Gaza 'to inspect the current distribution sites and secure a plan to deliver more food and meet with local Gazans to hear firsthand about this dire situation on the ground.' Witkoff and Huckabee would 'brief the president immediately after their visit to approve a final plan for food and aid distribution into the region,' she said, adding that the White House will provide more details 'once that plan is approved and agreed on by the president of the United States.' Friday's visit marks Witkoff's second trip to Gaza. Shortly after Trump took office in January, Witkoff visited the enclave, becoming the first US official to do so in more than a decade. A senior Hamas official condemned Witkoff's trip as little more than a photo opportunity. 'Mr. Witkoff, Gaza is not an animal farm that requires a staged personal visit to take some personal photos in front of the death traps overseen by your American companies,' Basem Naim, a former Palestinian health minister in Gaza, said in a statement shared with CNN. 'The people of Gaza are not a group of beggars, but a free, proud, and noble people... who seek only their freedom, independence, and return to their homeland.' The GHF was established in May after Israel complained that UN aid was reaching Hamas. But an internal US government review found no evidence of widespread theft by Hamas of US-funded humanitarian aid in Gaza. The analysis, conducted by the US Agency for International Development (USAID), looked into 156 incidents of waste, fraud, and abuse reported by partner organizations between October 2023 and May 2025. The review of the incidents 'found no affiliations' with sanctioned groups or foreign terrorist organizations, according to a presentation. — CNN