Wagah Border, Pakistan.
Photo: Filckr / Salman Ahmad
Wagah Border, Pakistan. Photo: Filckr / Salman Ahmad

Neighbours sans reporters

Subcontinent’s two biggest states don’t have a single reporter in each other’s countries.
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A fresh round of exchange of fire between India and Pakistan broke on 4 August 2015. Earlier in July, along with ceasefire violations, the two sides engaged in a bitter exchange of hostilities after Pakistan claimed to have shot down an alleged Indian 'spy drone' along the Line of Control (LoC) in Pakistan-administered Kashmir, a claim India was quick to rubbish.

The media in both countries spends considerable time and space discussing and analysing any engagement between them. Witnessing the extensive coverage, one would imagine that the Indian and Pakistani correspondents based in each other's countries would be intensely busy. But, the reality is bizarre; despite their shared obsession for each other, it has now been more than a year since an Indian reporter was based in Pakistan, and several years since a Pakistani reporter was based in India.

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