Shireen Mazari
| Shireen Mazari | |
|---|---|
| Residence | Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory |
| Citizenship | Pakistan |
| Nationality | Pakistan |
| Fields | Political Science |
| Institutions | Institute of Strategic Studies (ISS) Quaid-i-Azam University |
| Alma mater | London School of Economics and Political Science Columbia University |
Shireen M. Mazari, PhD, is a Pakistan political scientist and a prominent geostrategist, currently serving as Director-General of the Foreign Affairs Tank (FAT) of the Pakistan Movement of Justice. She is currently working as the editor of the daily The Nation newspaper and as the Spokesperson on Foreign Affairs of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf political party. She has also served as the Director General of The Institute of Strategic Studies, a think-tank based in Islamabad and was until recently a regular columnist at the daily The News International. She former served as professor of Military Science at the Quaid-e-Azam University.
Mazari was removed from her position as editor of The News after charging that journalists and aid workers were operatives for the US Government and the CIA. She cites American pressure in these episodes, a charge that both the government and The News administration deny.[1]
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[edit] Education
Mazai attended the London School of Economics and Political Science where she gained a B.Sc. with (Honours), followed by double M.Sc. in Military Science and Political science from the same institution. Mazari then traveled to United States where she attended the Columbia University. At there, she was awarded a Ph.D. in Political Science where her dissertation contained a comprehensive studies on Military history, geostrategic, and the foreign policy of Pakistan.[2]
[edit] Career
[edit] Academic career
Mazari formerly was an Associate Professor and then Chairperson of the Department of Defense and Strategic Studies at the Quaid-i-Azam University, Islamabad.
She served as the Director General of The Institute of Strategic Studies, a research think-tank based in Islamabad until 2008. She was removed from this position in May 2008 before the end of her contract in August 2009, supposedly at the insistence of the United States, a point Mazari maintains despite United States denials. Former Foreign Secretary Ambassador Tanvir Ahmad Khan replaced her.[3]
[edit] Journalist and editor
Mazari was the Publisher and Editor-in-Chief of Weekly Pulse, from 1993 to 1999. She has also stayed as a regular columnist for The News International newspaper, writing for the daily as recently as 3 September 2009. She left the paper claiming American intrusion. Addressing a news conference, Mazari said that the US is poking its nose in all affairs of Pakistan, and when she started writing columns critical of the US policies in the region, the US Ambassador exerted pressure on the newspaper's management to suspend her writing.[citation needed]
The News International team, however, denied this allegation, and issued a clarification.[4]
Barely four days after leaving The News, she was offered the editor position at The Nation. She took over this position on 7 September 2009 vice Arif Nizami who was earlier sacked by his uncle and the Waqt Media Group editor-in-chief Majid Nizami.[5]
[edit] Controversies
The Nation published a front page article ("Journalists as spies in FATA?"[6]) on 5 November 2009, accusing the South Asian correspondent of "The Wall Street Journal", Matthew Rosenberg, of working for the CIA, Israeli intelligence, and the U.S. military contractor Blackwater.
Wall Street Journal Managing Editor Robert Thomson wrote to Mazari[7] soon after the Rosenberg article appeared. Wall Street Journal’s Daniel Pearl, kidnapped and killed in 2002, was labelled a Jewish spy in a similar manner by some sections of Pakistani media.
Twenty-one international news editors from Islamabad’s foreign correspondent community also signed a letter[8] of protest, criticizing the unsubstantiated article for compromising Matt Rosenberg's security.
In a television interview[9] regarding the incident, Shireen Mazari strongly defended her story.
On 20 November 2009, "The Nation" published yet another front page story[10] with a photograph of what it described as "Mysterious US nationals". "According to a source in another investigation agency, the foreigners seemingly belonged to the US spy agency CIA. It was evident from the fact that two police commandos were escorting them, the source added."
However, it turned out that this "Mysterious US National" was in fact the award-winning Australian photojournalist Daniel Berehulak, who works for Getty Images. Hugh Pinney, Getty’s senior director of photography, wrote[11] to Shireen Mazari on 21 November 2009.
Both Rosenberg and Berahulak have left Pakistan.[12]
[edit] Political career
Mazari's views are considered to be a form of Pakistan nationalism and strong vocal of the Two-Nation Theory. Outspoken on Pakistan Foreign policy, she remains one of the academic openly criticizing Drone attacks and continue to criticize American-Pakistan relations. She joined Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf on 25 November 2008 after a meeting with the Chairman of the party, Imran Khan.
[edit] Views
She is a vocal critic of the United States policies in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Mazari said her life has been under threat adding that the Minister of Interior and US diplomats will be responsible if anything happened to her.[13]
[edit] Family
She is the daughter of former bureaucrat turned politician Ashiq Mohammad Khan Mazari,known as AMK Mazari. She has two children.
[edit] Books
- Pakistan's Lesson from its Kargil War: An Analysis (1999)
[edit] References
- ^ "Imran Khan's Shireen Mazari and her shoddy journalism", Retrieved 23 May 2010
- ^ Dr.Shireen Mazari
- ^ "ISSI DG Shireen Mazari removed" Daily Times, 15 May 2008
- ^ "Clarification by The News group" "The News", 7 September 2009
- ^ "Shireen Mazari replaces Arif Nizami as Editor The Nation" Daily Times, 8 September 2009
- ^ "Journalists as spies in FATA?" The Nation, 5 November 2009
- ^ "Letter from WSJ to Mazari", "Committee to Protect Journalists", 6 November 2009
- ^ "Letter about The Nation article" "Committee to Protect Journalists", 16 November 2009
- ^ "Dawn News TV Interview" "Youtube" 17 Nov 2009
- ^ "Mysterious US Nationals" "The Nation" 20 November 2009
- ^ "Letter from Getty Images to The Nation" "Committee to Protect Journalists", 21 November 2009
- ^ "CIA slur has chilling parallel with Daniel Pearl" "The Australian" 26 November 2009
- ^ http://www.sananews.com.pk/english/2009/09/02/us-base-being-built-in-sindh-mazari/
[edit] External links
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This article's citation style may be unclear. The references used may be made clearer with a different or consistent style of citation, footnoting, or external linking. (September 2009) |
- Dr. Shireen Mazari on TV program Islamabad Tonight
- Dr. Shireen Mazari joins Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf
- Website of the Institute of Strategic Studies
- http://www.saag.org/papers13/paper1231.html
- http://www.asian-affairs.com/biographies/shireenmmazaricv.html
- http://www.nupi.no/IPS/filestore/semi0902_04.pdf%20
- "The truth about Kargil" by A.G. Noorani at Frontline
- Weekly Pulse
- Compilation of her articles
- Pakistani academics
- Pakistani scholars
- Pakistani journalists
- Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf politicians
- International relations scholars
- Baloch people
- Pakistani political scientists
- Political science writers
- Muslim scholars
- Columbia University alumni
- Alumni of the London School of Economics
- Living people
- Pakistani women
- Quaid-i-Azam University faculty
- Pakistani women in politics
- Defence and security analysts in Pakistan