Veteran Journalist Zafar Agha Passes Away

The ‘National Herald’ editor had been a journalist for over 45 years.

New Delhi: Zafar Agha, editor-in-chief of Qaumi Awaz and former editor of the National Herald passed away early on March 22, 2024. He was 70.

Agha was born in 1954 at Allahabad and studied at the Yadgaar Hussaini Inter-College and Allahabad University. A student of English literature, it is at the Allahabad University that he was drawn into the progressive student movement. He remained allied to left and democratic politics throughout his life.

Agha began his career as a journalist with the Link magazine in 1979 and was active in the profession for more than 45 years. During this time he worked with the Patriot and the Business and Political Observer, with India Today as political editor, and at ETV and the Inquilab Daily.

His final stint was with the National Herald group, first as editor of the Qaumi Awaz and later, as editor-in-chief of the National Herald.

Agha was active with the Delhi Union of Journalists. He also served as member and later as officiating chairman of the National Commission for Minority Educational Institutions till 2017.

Several on social media have posted messages of condolence.

‘Dainik Jagran’ Journalist Shot Dead in Bihar

Vimal was the only eye-witness in the murder of his brother four years ago.

New Delhi: A journalist employed with the paper Dainik Jagran was shot dead in Bihar’s Araria district today, August 18, news agency PTI has reported.

PTI has posted on X (formerly Twitter), a video of Araria superintendent of police Ashok Kumar identifying the journalist as Vimal and noting that he was shot dead by four men at around 5.30 am.

The incident took place at the Raniganj market area in Araria, according to SP Kumar. However, Jagran has reported that its reporter was killed at his house.

Jagran has identified Vimal as its news source in Araria. Four years ago, his brother Kumar Shashibhushan alias Gabbu was also shot dead, the report said. Vimal was the only witness in the case.

Police have taken Vimal’s body for post-mortem and are working on the case.

He is survived by a 15-year-old son and a 13-year-old daughter.

India has slipped to the 161st rank in terms of press freedom out of 180 countries ranked by Reporters Without Borders – 11 ranks worse than 2022, when it stood at 150.

It is among 31 countries where RSF believes the situation for journalists is “very serious”.

RSF, Amnesty Ask Pakistan to Find Pro-Khan Anchor Imran Riaz

The prominent journalist and supporter of ex-PM Imran Khan was detained by the Pakistani police, but the authorities then failed to present him in court.

Imran Riaz, a well-known TV anchor and YouTuber, was among the thousands of Imran Khan supporters who were detained following the former premier’s arrest and violent protests in Pakistan earlier this month. The journalist was reportedly taken into custody from the airport at the eastern city of Sialkot on May 11th on suspicion of inciting violence. He was due to appear before the court in Lahore this Monday.

But then, the story took an unusual turn — authorities failed to present Riaz during the hearing. Punjab police chief Usman Anwar told the court he was “clueless” about his whereabouts.

The Chief Justice of the Lahore High Court warned the authorities that “no one will be spared if anything happened” to the 47-year-old reporter.

Riaz’s wife, Arbab Imran, told DW she is worried for her husband’s safety.

“The arrest of my husband is deeply troubling. He raised voices for the vulnerable people and for the truth. My four children are concerned about him, and we don’t know the whereabouts of him. He was taken off air many times, and I demand from authorities for his immediate release,” she said.

RSF points to Pakistan’s military intelligence

Pakistan is going through a deep political crisis marked by a power struggle between Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party and the current government led by Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif, with the military and the judiciary also being affected. Khan has recently stepped up his attacks on the military, accusing it of working against him. Riaz is a well-known media figure among Khan’s supporters.

Founder and Leader of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, Imran Khan.
Photo: Screengrab via YouTube/PTI

On Tuesday, Reporters Without Border (RSF) representative Daniel Bastard said it was “clearly Pakistan’s military intelligence agencies that abducted Imran Riaz,” after the Punjabi inspector spoke of unspecified “agencies” during the court hearing.

“According to confidential diplomatic sources consulted by RSF, the government’s silence about the TV anchor’s fate suggests that he may have fared badly since his abduction and may even have died in detention,” the watchdog organisation said.

Separately, Amnesty International called for Riaz’s immediate recovery.

“On 22 May, the police told the Lahore high court that there is no trace of him in any police department in the province.”

The organisation said the events amount to “an enforced disappearance” under international law.


“Punishing dissenting voices using enforced disappearance has been a worrying trend in Pakistan for many years and must be ended,” Amnesty said.

Riaz missing, Sharif killed in exile

Riaz’s lawyer Azhar Siddique says that the arrest is a “blatant violation of freedom of expression.”

Riaz decried Imran Khan’s ouster from power in April last year, linking it to “regime change” and amplifying Khan’s claims that the military was involved in ending his government. The anchor was already arrested twice, in July 2022 and February 2023. The latter saw Pakistan’s Federal Investigation Agency suspect him of hate speech and criticism of the military.

The disappearance of Riaz prompted some in Pakistan to draw parallels with the killing of veteran reporter Arshad Sharif last October. Sharif was well-known for criticising the Pakistani military, forcing him to flee Pakistan in August 2022 to avoid arrest. He was killed in Kenya in what a team of Pakistani investigators described to be a “targeted assassination.” The background of the murder remains unclear.

Bad optics for freedom of speech?

With the country on edge, a disappearance of a prominent journalist is sure to chill other reporters in the country. Journalist Javeria Siddique, the widow of the late Sharif, told DW that Riaz’s arrest was “really alarming and a bad optic for freedom of speech in Pakistan.”

“The government is arresting journalists over their stories and being vocal,” she said, pointing to her husband’s killing in Kenya. “Then we have seen the same pattern for Imran Riaz,” she added.

“I am requesting from the authorities that they should immediately and unconditionally release the journalist Imran Riaz Khan. Criticising the ruling elite of Pakistan is not something which falls in hate speech,” Siddique added.

Osama Malik, a legal expert, notes that the freedom of information and the freedom of expression is guaranteed by the Pakistani Constitution.

“Imran Riaz’s brand of journalism may not be palatable to everyone, but that is certainly not a reason for the state to spirit him away,” he told DW. “It is highly condemnable that despite the province’s highest court asking about his whereabouts, the law enforcement agencies are unable or unwilling to present Imran Riaz in court or divulge his location.”

This article was originally published on DW.


Nachiketa Desai, a Journalist Who Held the Values of the Freedom Struggle Aloft

Nachiketa’s dream was to write a book on his grandfather Mahadev Desai, who was Mahatma Gandhi’s secretary. His dream came true shortly before his death.

Journalist Nachiketa Desai passed away in Ahmedabad on Sunday, February 5 after a fall at his house. Why should a journalist’s death make news when the entire profession has been dealt a death blow by massive lay-offs, corporate takeover, dissolution of the Working Journalists’ Act and destroying the profession that was once held as the Fourth Estate?

Nachiketa Desai was a special person; while he was courageously battling cancer and heart problems, he held a dream close to his heart – he wanted to write and bring out a book about his grandfather. Mahadev Desai was Mahatma Gandhi’s secretary and lived Bapu’s life thrice over: envisaging his day, making his appointments, assiduously being by his side, keeping notes and then writing them out meticulously. He died of a massive heart attack on August 15, 1942 when he was imprisoned inside Aga Khan detention camp along with Mahatma Gandhi, Kasturba Gandhi and Sushila Nayar.

In an interview recorded by me in 1998, Sushila Nayar confided that the British wanted Gandhi to hand over the body of Mahadev Desai to them but Bapu refused, saying that no one can possibly hand over his son’s body. He cremated Mahadev Desai himself, inside the Aga Khan detention grounds, and kept his ashes in an empty ink bottle. Every morning, he would smear the ashes on his forehead which was not liked by Kasturba, as she felt Bapu was acting like Shiva, which no one should ever do. The task of keeping the diary was then taken over by the young Sushila Nayar, who had just completed her medical degree.

Like any Indian, I was extremely keen to see Nachiketa Desai;s book on the writings of Mahadev Desai, who wrote for and edited Young India and Navjivan, often anonymously, as he was a foot soldier of Gandhi and a journalist without bylines! In his own words, Gandhi was a hard taskmaster. So Mahadev Desai had not quite received his due share of recognition.

Mahadev Desai’s son Narayanbhai Desai was also an amazing fount of energy and commitment to the idea of India. Interviewing him and his reminiscences was also such a soul-affirming moment, as after the 2002 Gujarat carnage he had gone across the country reciting the Gandhi Katha – Gandhi’s story and his ideals. The Gandhi Kathas were attended by thousands of people who often wept while listening to them.

Nachiketa was a befitting son who followed the footsteps of an illustrious freedom fighters’ family as was his maternal family, Malati Devi Choudhury (nee Sen) whom Mahatma Gandhi had nicknamed ‘Toophani’. However, in his own right as a journalist, Nachiketa worked with the National Herald, Business India and Newstime over the years. However, he remained at heart a freedom fighter and even resigned from his job once when urged not to carry the second part of an article he had commissioned. Despite the cancer that ravaged him of which he put up details on social media posts, Nachiketa wrote his book, Mahadev Desai – Mahatma Gandhi’s Frontline Reporter, exhorted by many like me who simply wanted to read it!

Unfortunately, he revealed to me in a telephone conversation that it had several proof-reading errors and as he had a premonition that he was running out of time on planet earth, just a few digital copies were printed for the already announced launch at Sabarmati ashram on January 1, 2023 – Mahadev Desai’s birth anniversary. Lord Bhikhu Parekh, Gandhian and writer, Varsha Das, actor-director, Nandita Das and members of the Sabarmati Ashram Trust were present at the launch. The corrected book will hopefully be out soon, but I am so glad that Nachiketa wrote the book and had the pleasure of releasing it.

Nachiketa Desai’s passing symbolises the passing of an era where journalists held the values of the freedom struggle aloft. While he will be deeply missed, one hopes the flame will not be extinguished as the struggle for true freedom continues.

This article was originally published in Mainstream Weekly. It has been edited lightly for style and clarity.

How a Cross-Border Workshop With Over 60 Indian, Pakistani Journalists in Nepal Broke Barriers

Journalists at the week-long workshop discussed issues around cross-border stories and how the relations – or lack thereof – and climate changes affect these areas.

The convoluted journey from Karachi to Kathmandu I undertook recently brought me to a week-long cross-border reporting workshop with 66 journalists from India and Pakistan. This was perhaps the largest such exercise in a long time. Maybe ever.

In a world of virtual interactions, and particularly, in a pandemic-hit world, in-person meetings are rare. Pandemic or no pandemic, for Pakistanis and Indians to meet each other is even rarer.

“If nothing else, to think 60-plus journalists from both countries coming together in itself was a cause célèbre,” award-winning investigative journalist Dilrukshi Handunnetti, a trainer from Sri Lanka, told Sapan News later.

Our interactions at the East West Centre’s cross-border project ‘Reporting on Cross-Border Issues of Mutual Concern’ highlighted the need for such meetings. The Hawaii-based public non-profit organisation has been conducting media programmes between India and Pakistan since 2015. It has over 300 media alumni, including Handunnetti, who heads the Centre for Investigative Reporting in Colombo.

Direct flights, please

A direct Karachi-Kathmandu flight takes under three hours. But there are no such flights anymore. Pakistanis can’t fly to Nepal via India due to visa issues. So over 30 Pakistani journalists had to travel via the Middle East or Turkey – first flying west, then doubling back east. For most of us, the journey took an average of 8-10 hours each way.

Our colleagues flying in from India made it in 45-90 minutes.

Excessive travel times aside, it was exciting to meet those with whom we had been interacting virtually for over two years since our East-West fellowships began in early 2020. Since then, we have collaborated and forged links while working on stories, interacting through Zoom and WhatsApp.

It was surreal to see the familiarity that had developed, reflected in how participants greeted each other. And yet, given the size of the group, there were also security concerns. Social media posts had to be taken down in order to protect each other from accusations of being traitors or ‘collaborating with the enemy’.

Overall, though, it was “a great experience”, as freelancer Rabia Umaima Ahmed from Lahore put it.

Journalists from both countries need to meet more – this was the general agreement. We need to do this to stop enabling an environment of hate.

Over a cup of tea or a meal, the stories are very different. Journalists from both countries understand that radicalisation, extremism and violence at home or across the border are dangerous not only for each other but also for internal politics and overall society.

Indian and Pakistan journalists with their instructors in Nepal. Photo: author provided

Bonding over breakfast

On the first day, the instructors had to put in some effort to break up the in-person reunions taking place over breakfast to move us into the sessions.

There was a positivity in the air as we found counterparts from the other side and organically formed four focus groups to work in – health, environment, economy and trade, agriculture and water management – for collaborative stories to be completed by December this year.

The devastating floods in Pakistan were discussed in all the groups. The Indian journalists were deeply concerned, keenly aware that this is not an isolated situation. It will affect the whole region.

Discussions over the week ranged from issues around cross-border social and human rights stories and digital startups launched by women entrepreneurs, to environment, agriculture and trade, and how the relations, or lack thereof, and climate changes affect these areas.

“It was inspiring to see these supposed enemies working together as professional journalists while simultaneously developing friendships in the process. After collaborating with these peace-builders, it’s hard to not be optimistic about the future in South Asia,” commented Steven Youngblood, founding director, Centre for Global Peace Journalism, Park University, Parkville, Missouri.

When Pakistanis and Indians meet, their similarities often make them forget that they are from different countries. Even contentious issues like Kashmir can be discussed civilly. Participants from the area felt that their region is mostly ignored and the media does not report on what is actually happening there.

“In the end, it will not be the speeches or training that will make the biggest and most lasting impact,” as Randall Smith, a business journalist teaching at the Missouri School of Journalism and one of the instructors heading the economy and trade group, told Sapan News later.

“The most important legacy of the gathering is the lifelong relationships formed by journalists from Pakistan and India. Those relationships will translate into fact-based reporting on issues important to the future of both countries.”

Good journalism is particularly essential in a world wrestling with the complexities of climate, health, trade and food security, he added.

Other trainers and workshop leaders included Sara Shipley Hiles, also at the Missouri School of Journalism, heading the environment group; Erin Jordan, investigative journalist, The Gazette, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, heading the agriculture and water management group; and Laura Ungar, global health reporter with the Associated Press, heading the health group.

Also read: How to Beat Fake News? ‘Vaccination’ Could Be the Answer

Countering misinformation

Dilrukshi Handunnetti, who has covered civil war in her country, conducted a session on ‘Cross-border Investigative Reporting in an Age of Misinformation’. Misinformation is not only dangerous during times of conflict but also in peace time. She stressed the importance of people-to-people communication and connections and how journalists can help build peace.

“The hostile relations between India and Pakistan prevent people-to-people connectivity. To build understanding and identify mutual concerns and the vast possibilities for both nation states, journalists from both countries should have opportunities to connect and collaborate. In fact, it contributes to strengthening ties within the South Asian community,” she said.

“Narrative sharing and exploring new narratives through joint collaboration” by journalists from around India and Pakistan will show what’s possible to achieve when reporting together, she said. It will also highlight the challenges journalists need to overcome when working together.

East-West Center alumnus Christina Monroe, director of EWC Alumni Engagement coordinated workshop sessions as well as field trips around Kathmandu. There was also an alumni high tea co-coordinated by the EWC Nepal Chapter.

Steve Rice, professor emeritus at the Missouri School of Journalism, in his plenary session talked about the importance of incorporating multimedia in cross-border projects and integrating text with multimedia and social media.

The keynote was by acclaimed Nepali journalist Kanak Mani Dixit, founder Himal Southasian magazine and cofounder Himal Media, Kathmandu, talking about the ‘Importance and challenges of cross-border media collaboration in the region’.

His older brother Kunda Dixit, editor and publisher, Nepali Times, Kathmandu, moderated a session on the Importance and Challenges of Cross-Border Media Collaboration in South Asia. Peace journalism, he said, includes proactive reporting that helps humanize “the other” and gives voice to everyday people.

He talked about a project he worked on, later compiled into a book titled A People War: Images of the Nepal Conflict 1996-2006. Two sequels take the idea forward with photographs and stories of those who faced war and conflict in Nepal. The session highlighted the role of journalists during and after conflicts and war, and how to tell these stories.

In another plenary session, Steven Youngblood, founding director, Centre for Global Peace Journalism, Park University, Parkville, Missouri, talked about ‘Peace Journalism in Nepal and South Asia’. Among the ideas that came up was covering similar stories and highlighting solutions from one country to find solutions in the other.

Mutual issues

Sessions and activities included field trips for participants of all four groups, visiting sites relevant to their areas of interest.

Independent journalist Priyadarshini Sen from New Delhi was in the environment group that visited a recycling plant and met with workers there.

The overall workshop, she said, exposed her to many ideas, connections, multimedia skills, and peace-building methodologies that reaffirmed her belief in going beyond the tried-and-tested to work for a more peaceful and inclusive subcontinent.

“In a world where prejudices, bigotry, and pettiness are tearing people apart, programmes like these hold the possibility of building freer and more loving connections,” she said.

Umaima was part of the health group that visited Khokhana Vision Centre and Kirtipur Hospital in Kathmandu. The visit, she said, was a reminder of the state of healthcare in our region and the problems doctors and staff face to provide basic healthcare to the people.

The Vision Centre is set up in the heart of an indigenous community, Nirvari, in the Khokana area, at a small village about eight kilometers south of Kathmandu. The Vision Centre organises eye camps in various areas, including schools for regular checkups, and provides basic treatment. Serious cases go to the Nepal Eye Hospital in the capital, paying a minimum amount for checkups and surgical procedures.

Indian and Pakistani journalists sharing sweets with each other at the workshop. Photo: author provided

Breaking Barriers

“It was truly a great experience and exposure,” said George Kallivayalill, associate editor and chief of bureau, Deepika newspaper, New Delhi, who was part of the agriculture group. “The best thing about this workshop was getting to know more about our neighbours and the feeling of togetherness.” It gave him hope for “a bright peaceful future for the next generations in both countries.”

The week gave Sai Manish, a business journalist in New Delhi in the economy group, “a better understanding of cross-border issues, fresh perspectives, knowledge of new journalistic tools,” and most importantly, “a sense of joy at having met fantastic colleagues and forging good personal and professional bonds.”

Journalists also shared traditional sweets from their countries, like Shreya Pareek who offered Bengaluru’s Kundan sweetmeats and Faiz Paracha who brought Multan’s famous sohan halwa.

As Kunda Dixit said, “It’s wonderful seeing journalists from both sides together in Kathmandu as if there were no sides. Makes you recall John Lennon singing, Imagine there’s no countries…”

It is time to break down the barriers and allow peace to make a path through the region.

The writer is a freelance journalist based in Karachi. She is gender coordinator – Pakistan for the International Federation of Journalists, vice-president of Karachi Union of Journalists, a member of IFJ’s Gender Council, and East West Center Fellow 2022.

This article was originally published on Sapan News Network

Despite Bail, Siddique Kappan’s Lawyers Can’t Find People Willing to Stand Surety: Report

Nine days since he received bail in the UAPA case from the SC, Kappan’s lawyer, Mohamed Dhanish, told ‘The Quint’ that people were probably hesitant to stand surety because of the ‘sensitive nature of the case.’

New Delhi: No one is willing to stand surety for Kerala journalist Siddique Kappan a week after he was given bail by the Supreme Court, according to a news report. Kappan, arrested while on his way to Hathras in 2020 to report on the incident of the gang-rape and death of a Dalit teenager by ‘upper’ caste men, has been in jail for almost two years.

Kappan’s lawyer, Mohamed Dhanish, told The Quint on September 16 that they were finding it difficult to find two people to stand local surety for Kappan because of the “sensitive nature of the case”. It’s been nine days since he received bail in the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act case but people are “hesitant” to come forward to help the journalist, his lawyer said.

Kappan needs two people based in Uttar Pradesh to stand as surety for him to be able to avail himself of the bail. Kappan and his family are original residents of Kerala. He had been based in New Delhi before his arrest.

Though his lawyers had requested the court to consider Kappan’s wife and brother who were present during the hearing to be considered as sureties, the trial court in Lucknow, which set his bail conditions on September 12, refused. As per the bail conditions, the court required that his lawyers produce two people, who have Rs 1 lakh worth of value either in their account or by way of assets, as sureties along with a personal bond of Rs 1 lakh as well.

The judge also sought an undertaking from Kappan that he would not breach the conditions imposed on him by the apex court, as The Wire had reported.

At present, Kappan continues to remain in a jail in Lucknow, as a case being probed by the Enforcement Directorate under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) against him is still pending, PTI had earlier reported.

He will be released only once he obtains bail in the ED case, Lucknow Jail senior superintendent Ashish Tiwari had told Times of India. The hearing of the case is listed for September 19.

Watch | Journalist Siddique Kappan Granted Bail: His Case Explained

The Wire explains who Kappan is and the legal turns his case has taken, leading up to his bail.

Journalist Siddique Kappan was granted bail by a bench of the Supreme Court on Friday, September 9. Kappan has spent nearly two years in jail over charges of a conspiracy against the state. He was arrested while he was on his way to report from Uttar Pradesh’s Hathras where a Dalit woman was gang-raped by upper-caste Thakur men.

In this video, The Wire explains who Kappan is and the legal turns his case has taken, leading up to his bail.

Brazil: Remains Found in Search for Journalist, Expert Missing in Amazon

The suspect, a fisherman who had clashed with missing indigenous expert Bruno Pereira over his efforts to combat illegal fishing in indigenous territory, led police to the remote burial site.

Atalaia do Norte (Brazil): Police have found human remains in their search for British journalist Dom Phillips and Brazilian indigenous expert Bruno Pereira after a suspect confessed to killing them in the Amazon rainforest, investigators said on Wednesday.

The suspect, a fisherman who had clashed with Pereira over his efforts to combat illegal fishing in indigenous territory, led police to a remote burial site where the remains were unearthed, detective Eduardo Fontes told a news conference.

The news marks a grim conclusion to a case that has raised global alarm, hanging over President Jair Bolsonaro at a regional summit and stirring concern in the British Parliament.

British journalist Dom Phillips, who went missing while reporting in a remote and lawless part of the Amazon rainforest. Photo: Reuters/File

Phillips, a freelance reporter who has written for the Guardian and the Washington Post, was doing research for a book on the trip with Pereira, a former head of isolated and recently contacted tribes at federal indigenous affairs agency Funai.

They were in a remote jungle area near the border with Colombia and Peru called the Javari Valley, which is home to the world’s largest number of uncontacted indigenous people. The region has been invaded by illegal fishermen, hunters, loggers, and miners, and police call it a key route for drug trafficking.

Police had previously identified their primary suspect as fisherman Amarildo da Costa, known as “Pelado,” who was arrested last week on weapons charges. His brother Oseney da Costa, 41, or “Dos Santos,” was taken into custody on Tuesday night.

Public defenders representing the brothers could not immediately be reached for comment. The suspects’ family had previously denied they had any role in the men’s disappearance.

Detective Fontes told journalists the “first suspect” had confessed and led police to the human remains, but the other suspect in custody had denied any role despite incriminating evidence. Police are investigating the involvement of a third person and further arrests are possible, he added.

The Costa brothers were seen meeting on the Itacoai river just moments after Phillips and Pereira passed by on June 5, headed toward the riverside town of Atalaia do Norte, a witness told federal police in a report reviewed by Reuters.

The police report said witnesses heard Pereira say he had received threats from Amarildo da Costa. A former official for indigenous affairs agency Funai, Pereira had been instrumental in stopping illegal gold mining, fishing and poaching along rivers inhabited by indigenous tribes of the Javari Valley.

News of the men’s disappearance echoed globally, with human rights organisations, environmentalists and press advocates urging Bolsonaro to step up the search after a slow start.

Bolsonaro, who once faced tough questioning from Phillips at a news conference over weakening environmental law enforcement, said last week that the two men “were on an adventure that is not recommended.”

On Wednesday, Bolsonaro suggested that Phillips had made enemies by writing about environmental issues.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson told Parliament on Wednesday he was deeply concerned about the disappearance of Phillips and said his government was working with Brazilian authorities investigating the case.

(Reuters)

Journalist, Expert Still Missing in Amazon, Brazil Police Focus Probe on Poachers

Dom Phillips, a freelance journalist who has written for ‘The Guardian’ and ‘The Washington Post’, and Bruno Pereira, a former official with a federal indigenous agency, went missing in a ‘lawless’ part of the Amazon rainforest.

Rio de Janeiro: Brazilian police investigating the disappearance of a British journalist and an indigenous expert in the Amazon rainforest are focusing on people involved in illegal fishing and poaching in indigenous lands, three officers told Reuters.

Two of the officers are Amazonas state police detectives directly involved in the case, while the other is a senior Brazilian federal police officer tracking it closely. They requested anonymity to discuss an ongoing investigation.

“The principal criminal hypothesis at this point is that the people involved, and their motive, was related to illegal fishing and poaching activities in indigenous territories,” said the federal police officer.

British journalist Dom Phillips in a picture taken on December 2009 and obtained by Reuters on June 7, 2022. Photo: Paul Sherwood/Handout via Reuters

Witnesses said they last saw Dom Phillips, a freelance journalist who has written for the Guardian and the Washington Post, on Sunday. Phillips was traveling deep in a lawless part of the Amazon rainforest with Bruno Pereira, a former official with federal indigenous agency Funai.

Their disappearance has echoed globally, with politicians, celebrities, journalists and activists urging Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro’s government to intensify efforts to find them.

Brazilian Justice Minister Anderson Torres said he had told Vicky Ford, a senior British official responsible for Latin America, that Brazil would keep up the search for Phillips until it had exhausted all possibilities after meeting her on the sidelines of the Summit of the Americas in Los Angeles.

Torres said he had 300 hundred people, two aircraft and 20 boats conducting the search in what he called a “very difficult region”.

“Even if you have 30 aircraft, one million people, it may not work,” said Torres, who was also pressed to maintain the search at the summit by US climate envoy John Kerry.

Phillips and Pereira were on a reporting trip in the Javari Valley, a remote jungle area near the Peruvian and Colombian border that is home to the world’s largest number of uncontacted indigenous people. The wild, unruly region has lured cocaine smugglers, as well as illegal hunters and fishermen.

Fishermen and poachers travel deep into the Javari Valley, next to the border with Peru, to find protected species like the pirarucu fish, which are sold in regional markets in nearby cities such as Tabatinga. In 2019, Maxciel Pereira, who worked with Funai to shut down illegal fishing in the Javari Valley, was shot dead in Tabatinga.

As a former Funai official in the Javari indigenous reservation, Pereira often clashed with fishermen plundering protected fishing stocks and traveled the region with a gun. He had recently received a threatening letter from a fisherman, police told Reuters.

Police in the town of Atalaia do Norte have questioned several fishermen as witnesses and arrested one of them, a local fisherman called Amarildo da Costa, known locally as “Pelado.” He has been charged with illegal possession of restricted ammunition. Police have said he was one of the last people to see the two men.

Federal police on Thursday said a forensic officer and state police were checking for “possible genetic material” on the boat with the reagent Luminol, which reveals blood stains. A detective in the case said police were investigating whether traces of blood found on da Costa’s boat were human or not.

The senior federal police officer and one of the detectives said da Costa was suspected of involvement in illegal fishing. The detective said da Costa and various other local fishermen interviewed by police as witnesses worked for a man known as “Colombia,” a big buyer of fish and game caught in the reserve.

Reuters was unable to contact or determine the buyer’s formal name. Two residents in Atalaia do Norte told Reuters that “Colombia” lived across the border in Peru.

Da Costa’s lawyer, Davi Oliveira, said his client was not involved in the disappearance of Phillips and Pereira and was only engaged in legal fishing.

Oliveira said he did not know if da Costa worked for “Colombia.” Oliveira stepped away from the case late on Thursday, and it was not immediately clear who would take up da Costa’s defense in court.

(Reuters)

Al Jazeera TV to Refer Killing of Its Journalist to ICC: Report

Abu Akleh, a prominent Palestinian-American Al Jazeera reporter, was shot dead during an Israeli raid in the occupied West Bank on May 11.

Cairo: Qatar’s Al Jazeera TV Network will refer the killing of its journalist Shireen Abu Akleh to the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC), it said in a televised statement on Thursday, May 26.

Abu Akleh, a prominent Palestinian-American Al Jazeera reporter, was shot dead during an Israeli raid in the occupied West Bank on May 11.

Also Read: The Killing of Shireen Abu Akleh Is No Aberration

Al Jazeera‘s legal team alongside international legal experts will prepare a file on the killing of Abu Akleh to refer it to the ICC.

(Reuters)