Pakistan is already a dangerous country for journalists, and a total of 53 have died since 1992, five this year alone. Taking note of the challenges newly presented, the Senate Standing Committee on Defence has held a sensitisation session for journalists titled “Cyber Security for Journalists”. We live in fast-changing times, with technologies of surveillance developing faster than governments can devise measures to counter them. The media are the first line of defence against unconventional threats to the state’s security. States globally are reviewing and redefining their security policies as threats shape-change before their eyes. The media are a primary civilian stakeholder, a partner of the state in the creation of effective cyber-security policies. Snowden may have made some governments profoundly uncomfortable and caused immense embarrassment; some might say damage, with his revelations. Pakistan is a ‘most watched’ state and it is incumbent upon the state to protect itself from intrusion. Our cyber-security has become of crucial importance.
Published in The Express Tribune, November 21st, 2013.
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