ndia-Pakistan pressures elevated
With tensions along the Indo-Pak border high, media in both countries have a big story to cover. The airwaves are abuzz as the media rhetoric on both sides gets ratcheted up higher and higher. It doesn't make the job of diplomats and governments any easier.
Talking us through the story: Wajahat Khan, anchor, Dunya News (Pakistan); Sonia Trikha Shukla, strategic affairs analyst (India); Amber Rahim Shamsi, anchor, Dawn TV (Pakistan); Bhupendra Chaubey, anchor, CNN-IBN (India).
On our radar:
The Pentagon paid a British public relations firm more than $500m to produce top-secret propaganda in Iraq, according to a story by the Bureau of Investigative Journalism.
As protests continue in Ethiopia, the government continues its crackdown on dissent with the arrest of well-known blogger and lecturer, Seyoum Teshome.
Chinese censors appear to have shut down Consensus Net, a website that provides comment and analysis from across the political spectrum.
Media blackout in Burundi
As Burundi teeters on the brink of a civil war, the media space has become eerily silent. A government crackdown on blacklisted media outlets has left an information vacuum, and only state or pro-government outlets remain to fill the void. Even more worrying is the rise of divisive ethnic narratives in the national discourse.