BFF-46 Afghanistan celebrates journalists as violence targets press

308

ZCZC

BFF-46

AFGHANISTAN-CONFLICT-MEDIA

Afghanistan celebrates journalists as violence targets press

KABUL, March 18, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Afghanistan on Monday marked National
Journalists Day amid a spike in violence that has already seen four media
workers killed so far this year, in one of the most dangerous countries in
the world for the press.

Gunmen killed Sultan Mahmood Khairkhaw, a journalist working for a private
TV channel and radio station in southeastern Khost province, on Friday — the
latest media worker to be killed in the war-torn country, which saw its
deadliest year on record for journalists in 2018.

“Freedom of expression is the most important achievement for us,” Sarwar
Danish, Afghanistan’s second vice president told a gathering of journalists
in Kabul.

“During the Taliban regime … any voice would be considered against their
movement. And it is not acceptable to us to put people under censorship and
pressure anymore,” he said.

The attack on Khairkhaw came two days after another journalist was
seriously wounded when a sticky bomb ripped through his vehicle in southern
Helmand province.

Since the fall of the Taliban regime in 2001, Afghanistan’s media has been
one of the country’s few success stories.

Hundreds of free media organisations have mushroomed, giving rise to a
lively and largely free press — something that had never before existed in
the country’s history.

The media landscape in the Afghanistan today includes over 100 TV
channels, 284 radio stations and just over 400 newspapers and magazines,
according to a recent government report.

Most of the outlets are private.

But growing violence has made the country one of the most dangerous
environments for the media.

Last month, two journalists were shot and killed when gunmen stormed their
radio station in Taloqan, the capital of Takhar province in north-east
Afghanistan.

The pair, both men in their 20s, worked for Radio Hamsada, a private
broadcaster.

In January, Afghan citizen journalist Jawid Noori was snatched from his
car and murdered by the Taliban in Farah province, in the country’s west.

Media watchdog group Reporters Without Borders (RSF) reported that 2018
was the deadliest year on record for journalists in Afghanistan.

“Eighteen journalists lost their lives in the line of duty last year,”
Danish said.

According to RSF, 60 journalists and media workers have been killed in
Afghanistan since the US-led invasion in 2001 — an average of around three a
year.

BSS/AFPBZC/1910HRS