PESHAWAR: The proscribed Tehrยญeek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) has issued a strict warning to Pakistani meยญdia and journalists, asking them to refrain from calling them a โterrorist outfitโ otherwise they will be treated as TTP’s enemies.
In a statement apparently released by the TTP on social media, its spokesman Mohammad Khurasani said they were monitoring the media coverage, branding the TTP with hateful titles, like โterrorists and extremistsโ.
โUsing such terms for TTP showed a partisan role of media and journalists,โ it said, adding this is a stigma on the profession of journalism.
Pakistani media had started referring to the TTP as a terrorist outfit since it began to target civilians in a series of attacks, and was banned by the government, according to Dawn.com. The TTP, a group of various militant outfits, was formed in 2007 and the federal government declared it a proscribed organisation in August 2008. Baitullah Mehsud was the first chief of the TTP who was killed in a US drone attack in 2009.

The government also banned other offshoots of the TTP and stopped media from what it called โglorification of militantsโ through the much-publicised National Action Plan in 2014.
Khurasani reportedly said the media used such obnoxious terms for the TTP at the behest of one party, which had selected it for its rivals. Therefore, the media should call them with the name of Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan. Otherwise, the media would do professional dishonesty and would create enemies for itself, the statement added.
Several Pakistani journalists have been assassinated, wounded and kidnapped in the war against terrorism across the country, particularly in the erstwhile Fata and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.
Around 30 journalists had been killed in militancy and acts of targeted killing in Fata and KP alone. In some cases, the family members of media persons were either killed or threatened to leave their native areas. Itโs not clear whether they, or some of them, were killed by the militants, as almost all of the perpetrators were never brought to justice.

