A Pakistani journalist, who works as bureau chief of Indian television channel WION and reports for France24, said that he narrowly escaped being abducted by armed men in Islamabad on Jan. 10. Taha Siddiqui said that 10-12 men hit him and threatened to kill him while he was on his way to the airport.
Siddiqui jumped out the vehicle and is now safe with police, he said. The anti-establishment journalist had complained earlier that he was being harassed.
Siddiqui said he was on the main expressway to the airport in Islamabad where his taxi was stopped by the men. The buttons of his shirt were ripped off and he was muddied while he hid and crawled through a ditch in an attempt to escape.
Pakistani journalist Taha Siddiqui describes the moment armed men tried to abduct him. Their car stopped in front of his – and they confronted him. He escaped by running through traffic and hiding in a ditch. He has been a vocal critic of the security establishment… pic.twitter.com/9B5MCtPnTJ
— Secunder Kermani (@SecKermani) January 10, 2018
“I was on my way to airport today at 8:20am when 10-12 armed men stopped my cab & forcibly tried to abduct me. I managed to escape. Safe and with police now,” Siddiqui posted from a friend’s Twitter account.
“Looking for support in any way possible #StopEnforcedDisappearances,” he added in the same tweet.
Journalists and others from across the world reacted to the incident.
Very shocked (but not entirely surprised) to hear @TahaSSiddiqui, a fearless critic of Pakistan’s deep state and its self-destructive policies, was beaten up and narrowly escaped abduction by unknown men this morning. Tragic how Pakistan’s best are targeted by its worst.
— Jonathan Boone (@Jon_Boone) January 10, 2018
The fact that armed men tried to abduct @TahaSSiddiqui – a reporter who’s won the highest press award in France – at 8 in the morning, in public, shows how confident his would be kidnappers are they will never be held to account. Surely no state can tolerate this…
— Secunder Kermani (@SecKermani) January 10, 2018
With @TahaSSiddiqui right now. It is a miracle that he escaped. He was beaten, threatened with death and his belongings taken.This is unacceptable. Journalism is not a crime. https://t.co/HXYnBctU9l
— Asad Hashim (@AsadHashim) January 10, 2018
This is the latest incident of a journalist being beaten up in Pakistan. In October 2017, Pakistani reporter Ahmed Noorani was beaten up in the middle of the day at a busy intersection in Islamabad. Cases of disappearances have been reported as well. An activist Raza Khan who promoted peace has been reported missing since the first week of December 2017.
Pakistan is fourth deadliest country in the world for journalists, according to the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ). Between 1990 and 2015, at least 115 journalists and media workers were killed in Pakistan. In 2017, Pakistan ranked 139 out of 180 in the Press Freedom Index, with journalists often citing the clampdown on press freedom from the government and the threats from militants while they do their job.
Prominent politician Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, the chairman of the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), had said on the International Day to End Impunity for Crimes Against Journalists (Nov. 2) that crimes against scribes shouldn’t go unpunished.