BOARD OF DIRECTORS
 
Arnold Amber
The Newspaper Guild
President
 
Mori Abdolalian
CJFE Journalists in Exile
 
Alison Armstrong
Journalist/writer
 
Bob Carty
CBC-Radio "The Sunday Edition"
 
Barbara Falk
Writer/Lecturer
 
Alice Klein
Now Magazine
 
Donald Livingstone
Promeus
 
Anita Mielewcyzk
Journalist/Law Student
 
John Norris
Criminal Law Lawyer
 
Mary Deanne Shears
Journalist

Natasha Tehranian
Ministry of Health and Long Term Care
 
Kelly Toughill
King's College, Nova Scotia
 
Anna Maria Tremonti
CBC Radio "The Current"
 
Philip Tunley
Lawyer, Stockwoods LLP
  ADVISORY BOARD
 
Peter Desbarats
Maclean-Hunter Chair for Communications Ethics, Ryerson
 
Parker Barss Donham
freelance
 
John Honderich
The Toronto Star
 
John Macfarlane
Toronto Life
 
Joe Matyas
Southern Ontario Newspaper Guild
 
Ann Medina
freelance
 
Rick Moffat
Radio-TV News Directors Assn.
 
Lynda Powless
Native Journalists' Association
 
Lloyd Robertson
CTV News
 
Robert Scully
Télémision Information Inc.
 
Julian Sher
Canadian Association of Journalists
 
Keith Spicer
Institut du Monde anglophone Université de Paris III Sorbonne nouvelle
 
Norman Webster
Montreal

His Excellency Musa Javed Chohan
High Commissioner of Pakistan to Canada
10 Range Road
Ottawa, Canada
K1N 8J3

February 25, 2009

Dear High Commissioner,

I am writing on behalf of Canadian Journalists for Free Expression (CJFE), a non-profit, non-governmental organization that works to promote and protect press freedom and freedom of expression around the world.

CJFE wishes to express its grave concern for the safety of Canadian journalist Khadija Abdul Qahaar, also known as Beverly Giesbrecht, who was kidnapped on November 11, 2008, in northern Pakistan. Qahaar was working on a documentary for the Al Jazeera network when she was taken at gunpoint along with her translator and guide in the Bannu district near the Afghan border.

In a video released on February 23 and aired by CBC Newsworld, Qahaar relates her ordeal. "I have been in captivity now for almost three months," she said. "I wake up in the dark and I go to sleep in the dark. There is nothing but a wood furnace and not enough wood." In the videotape she also confirms that she is being held by the Taliban.

Last month, The News International, the English-language Pakistani newspaper, reported that the abductors were asking $150,000 and the release of Taliban prisoners from an Afghan jail in exchange for Qahaar's freedom.

CJFE urges your government to work for the swift release of Canadian journalist Khadija Abdul Qahaar. We also urge the government to make the safety of all journalists working within its borders an ongoing priority.

We thank you for your attention and look forward to your reply.

Yours sincerely,

Arnold Amber, President

CC: Mr. Randolph Mank, High Commissioner of Canada to Pakistan
The Honourable Lawrence Cannon, Canadian Minister of Foreign Affairs