NAIROBI, Kenya
Global associations of
journalists have expressed concern over the murder of Pakistani journalist
Arshad Sharif, who met his untimely end in Kenya Sunday evening, calling for
immediate and speedy investigations into the case.Media representatives during a protest in Karachi on October 24, 2022 against the killing of Pakistani news anchor Arshad Sharif in Kenya.
Sharif was shot by Kenyan
police officers at a roadblock in Kajiado County, about an hour’s drive from
Nairobi. The police have since said they mistook the car he was travelling in
for a reportedly stolen one after it ran through the roadblock.
According to the International
Federation of Journalists (IFJ), Sharif was living in hiding after fleeing his
home country in August following the filing of multiple sedition cases against
him in different regions of Pakistan.
Anthony Bellanger, IFJ’s
secretary-general, said the federation “strongly condemns the killing of Arshad
Sharif and demands a thorough investigation into his death”.
“Journalists should be able to
live without fear of political retribution or assassination,” he added.
Numerous journalists have
echoed Mr Bellanger’s sentiments across the globe. They include the Pakistan
Federal Union of Journalists (PFUJ), Kenya Union of Journalists (KUJ) and
Africa’s Foreign Press Association.
In Pakistan, the journalists’ union has launched nationwide protests demanding an “international level investigation” into Sharif’s murder.
In a statement, PFUJ’s
president GM Jamali and secretary-general Rana Azeem said they have “grave
concerns over the suspicious killing of famous anchor person Arshad Sharif and
demands the authorities conduct a transparent and comprehensive investigation”.
The Foreign Press Association
said in a statement on Monday that it’s “incumbent upon the government of Kenya
to fully and conclusively investigate the incident”.
“By doing so, Nairobi would be
assuring foreign journalists based in the country and covering Africa,
including those who visit on assignment and other professional undertakings,
that they’re safe.”
In Kenya, both the
journalists’ lobby, KUJ, and regulator, Media Council of Kenya (MCK), have
condemned the killing and demanded a thorough investigation into the incident.
“From the police record, there
is more than meets the eye in the death of Mr Sharif and we demand a thorough
investigation to unravel the motive of the shootout,” KUJ Secretary-General
Erick Oduo said
MCK’s CEO David Omwoyo said
they are “calling upon the government to establish facts around the killing and
conduct proper judicial investigation”.
The Kenyan police have
expressed “regrets” over the incident.
“Competent authorities
are currently investigating the incident for appropriate action,” the police
spokesperson Bruno Shioso said.
The Independent Policing
Oversight Authority, which investigates cases of police misconduct in Kenya has
since announced the deployment of a team to probe Mr Sharif’s killing.
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