Nicholas Schmidle, an American journalist and a Pakistan-based fellow at the Institute of Current World Affairs, was allegedly deported last week by the Pakistani government, reportedly following the release of his January 6th article in the NY Times, entitled, “Next-Gen Taliban.” In the piece, Schmidle described the growing strength of the Taliban in Pakistan as well as the increasing struggle among Islamists who wish to be part of the democratic process and those who wish to destabilize the nation. He noted, “The emergence of Taliban-inspired groups in Pakistan has placed immense strain on the country’s Islamist community, a strain that may only increase with the assassination of Bhutto. As the rocket attack on Rehman’s house illustrates, the militant jihadis have even lashed out against the same Islamist parties who have coddled them in the past.” However, he wrote, “For now, it is Islamist violence that seems to have the political upper hand rather than the accommodation of Islamist currents within a democratic society.”
Following the release of the article, Schmidle told BBC News that he had been given a deportation notice “but no reason for the government’s move.” The day before, Schmidle recalled, an officer from the Pakistani ISI had stopped by his house and told his security guard, “He told my security guard that my visa had been canceled as I was writing against Pakistan.” However, the government denied such claims, and on Saturday said the journalist had left Pakistan “on his own volition.” An information ministry official told the BBC, “Initially a deportation order was served to him but it was later withdrawn. He left Pakistan on his own.”The incident, despite the conflicting reports, has sparked much controversy, both in Pakistan and among members of the international community. In a press release, Reporters Without Borders condemned Schmidle’s “forced departure,” asserting, “This does not bode well for the situation of foreign journalists, especially the many reporters who will be going to Pakistan to cover the legislative elections due to take place in a month from now…” In the country, the PPP also condemned the alleged deportation, describing it as “outrageous.” Pakistan’s Daily Times cited PPP information secretary Sherry Rahman, who said despite the lifting of the so-called emergency, “the regime continued to hound media on one pretext or the other.” She cited a recent report from the aforementioned Reporters Without Borders that described Pakistan as “the most dangerous Asian country for the media in 2007.” The Times added, “Most astonishingly she said 34 journalists in the province of Sindh were booked on the charge of rioting following Benazir Bhutto’s assassination. After the November 3 martial law, the regime shut down 45 private satellite TV channels and two radio stations adding to its long list of unconstitutional moves over the last eight years.” The alleged forced departure of Schmidle, she concluded, was “another reminder of the fact that an authoritarian leadership never had tolerance for independent voices.”
The media in Pakistan has always been independent, vocal, and free-reigning. The recent incident, as well as the treatment of the press in the past few months, has been extremely significant given the current atmosphere and the rising dissent against the government. In a society that has been increasingly plagued by violence, riots, and subsequent crackdowns, what role has, can, and should the media play?[A reader of this blog recently passed on a very poignant and interesting article by Shahan Mufti on the role of independent television in Pakistan, that is a good resource for this topic.]

