Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority (PEMRA) ( ur, ) is an independent and constitutionally established
federal institution responsible for regulating and issuing channel licenses for establishment of the
mass media culture
In cultural studies, media culture refers to the current Western capitalist society that emerged and developed from the 20th century, under the influence of mass media. The term alludes to the overall impact and intellectual guidance exerted by the ...
, print and electronic media.
Codified under the Article 19: Chapter I
of the
Constitution of Pakistan
The Constitution of Pakistan ( ur, ), also known as the 1973 Constitution, is the supreme law of Pakistan. Drafted by the government of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, with additional assistance from the country's opposition parties, it was approved b ...
, it has jurisdiction to impose reasonable restrictions in the interest of the religion, the integrity, national security of Pakistan.
Established on 1 March 2002, Pemra's principal objectives are to facilitate and regulate the private electronic mass-media industry and to improve the standards of information, education and entertainment.
Its constitutional mandate is to enlarge the choice available to the people of Pakistan including
news,
current affairs, religious knowledge,
art
Art is a diverse range of human activity, and resulting product, that involves creative or imaginative talent expressive of technical proficiency, beauty, emotional power, or conceptual ideas.
There is no generally agreed definition of wha ...
and
culture
Culture () is an umbrella term which encompasses the social behavior, institutions, and norms found in human societies, as well as the knowledge, beliefs, arts, laws, customs, capabilities, and habits of the individuals in these grou ...
as well as science and technology.
On 28 June 2018 after the Supreme Court's order, Saleem Baig was appointed as the Chairman of PEMRA
[.
]
Constitutional status and definition
The constitutional freedom of speech and press are highlighted in the Constitution of Pakistan. Under the Article 19 and Article 19A of Fundamental Rights in the Constitution of Pakistan. The Constitution grants PEMRA following powers:
# Improve the standards of information, education and entertainment.
#Enlarge the choice available to the people of Pakistan in the media for news, current affairs, religious knowledge, art, culture, science, technology, economic development, social sector concerns, music, sports, drama and other subjects of public and national interest.
#Facilitate the devolution of responsibility and power to the grass roots by improving the access of the people to mass media at the local and community level.
#Ensure accountability, transparency and good governance by optimization in the free flow of information.
Overview
The Authority is responsible for facilitating and regulating the establishment and operation of all private broadcast media and distribution services in Pakistan established for the purpose of international, national, provincial, district, and local or special target audience
History
The Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority (PEMRA) was promoted by the government as an open media policy reform and was fortified with strong regulatory teeth. The establishment of PEMRA was initiated in 2000, during President Musharraf's term; through the formation of the Regulatory Authority for Media Broadcast Organisations (RAMBO) which was mandated to improve standards of information, education and entertainment; expand the choice available to the people of Pakistan in the media for news, current affairs, religions knowledge, art, culture, science, technology, economic development, social sector concerns, music, sport, drama and other subjects of public and national interest; facilitate the devolution of responsibility and power to grass roots by improving the access to mass media at the local and community level; and lastly, to ensure accountability, transparency and good governance by optimising the free flow of information.[
Many pro-democratic campaigners consider this four-point mandate to be a solid foundation supporting democracy processes and comprehensive media liberalisation. However, the general opinion among media practitioners is that PEMRA only acted as a licence issuing office that has implemented regulatory barriers for broadcasters. "It is a Bhatta (money extortion in ) body that collects money from broadcasting operators in a legal way. Nothing more can be expected." notes media law activist and journalist ]Matiullah Jan
Matiullah Jan ( ur, ) is a senior Pakistani journalist and YouTuber.
Background
Jan has worked for several media outlets in Pakistan. He is known for his criticism of the Pakistani government.
Due to his criticism on establishment he has bee ...
.[
The PEMRA laws were utilized by the ]Musharraf
General Pervez Musharraf ( ur, , Parvez MuĊharraf; born 11 August 1943) is a former Pakistani politician and four-star general of the Pakistan Army who became the tenth president of Pakistan after the successful military takeover of the ...
regime in his attempts to tame the media. Some stations were shut down and some were under severe harassments using these laws. The 12-member authority was dominated by bureaucrats and ex-police officers - a phenomenon that had been partly changed after the assumption of office by the present government. However, media activists are still not comfortable with the composition of the 12-member committee where they highlight the need of a greater representation from the media itself. "Regulation of the TV and Radio should be through the participation and representation of the stake holders. What must happen is the restructuring of the Board of PEMRA with independent eminent people. It is still full of bureaucrats and ex-policemen, so there you find lack of ownership." says Matiullah Jan
Matiullah Jan ( ur, ) is a senior Pakistani journalist and YouTuber.
Background
Jan has worked for several media outlets in Pakistan. He is known for his criticism of the Pakistani government.
Due to his criticism on establishment he has bee ...
.[
PEMRA's leadership agree to that the institution needs to be more engaged with its stakeholders. "It's a combination of regulator and the stakeholders. Therefore, the chain is - Law/Regulator/Stakeholder," says Dr. Abdul Jabbar, the Executive Member of PEMRA.][
However, the present government is under pressure to amend or repeal these laws. Many media practitioners confirmed that the harsh use of the PEMRA laws during the Musharraf regime had not occurred during the past years. The PEMRA board has been reconstituted to some extent and includes some media professionals. Furthermore, the government is making some attempts to reintroduce some democratic norms in its media regulation reform.
The Code of Conduct made by PEMRA has been subjected to criticism by the industry players and is now being reviewed by the government. The former Minister of Information has requested the Pakistani Broadcasters Association to draft a new Code of Conduct to replace the existing Code of Conduct of PEMRA.][
Still, a somewhat top-down approach is taken from PEMRA authorities on this matter. Referring to the issue of Code of Conduct, Dr. Abdul Jabbar said that presently there are many Codes of Conduct, one by PFUJ, one by South Asia Free Media Association (SAFMA) and the broadcasters are in the process of formulating another. "The Government will not agree to any of these, most probably. But taking all these documents into account, the government will come up with a comprehensive document that can be acceptable to all stakeholders. Then everybody has the ownership". He continued: "PEMRA will function - it will not be silenced or nullified. We will be the regulatory body. But the stakeholders will have a say in the Code of Conduct. That's what we call self-regulation."]
Chairman of the Authority
* Mian Javed (Founding Chairman)
* Mr. Iftikhar Rashid (2nd Chairman)
* Mr. Mushtaq Malik (3rd Chairman)
* Dr. Abdul Jabbar (Acting Chairman)
* Mr. Rashid Ahmad (4th Chairman)
* Mr. Pervaiz Rathore (Acting Chairman)
* Mr. Kamaluddin Tipu (Acting Chairman)
* Mr. Absar Alam (5th Chairman)
* Mr. Muhammad Saleem Baig (6th Chairman)[
]
See also
*Censorship in Pakistan
The Pakistani Constitution limits Censorship in Pakistan, but allows "reasonable restrictions in the interests of the sovereignty and integrity of Pakistan or public order or morality". Press freedom in Pakistan is limited by official censorship t ...
*Internet censorship in Pakistan
Internet censorship in Pakistan is government control of information sent and received using the Internet in Pakistan. There have been significant instances of website access restriction in Pakistan, most notably when YouTube was banned from 2 ...
* List of radio channels in Pakistan
* List of radio channels in Pakistan
*List of television channels in Pakistan
This is a list of television channels in Pakistan. Television in Pakistan was introduced in 1964.
Current Channels
General Entertainment Urdu
Punjabi
* Punjab TV
Sindhi
* Awaz TV
* Dharti TV
* Kashish
* KTN
* Sindh TV
Pashto
...
References
External links
*
{{Authority control
Communications authorities
Mass media complaints authorities
Entertainment rating organizations
Pakistan federal departments and agencies
Mass media in Pakistan
Broadcasting in Pakistan
Censorship in Pakistan
2002 establishments in Pakistan
Government agencies established in 2002
Consumer organisations in Pakistan
Regulatory authorities of Pakistan
Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority