Taliban continues to harass, torture, kill journalists in Afghanistan
Journalists are scared; feeling hopeless as the spirit of journalism they built in the past two decades is ceasing to exist now, reported Al Arabiya Post.
Despite making promises of respecting human values, the Taliban continues to violate the basic human rights of media personnel as they are being harassed, tortured, and killed.
Journalists are scared; feeling hopeless as the spirit of journalism they built in the past two decades is ceasing to exist now, reported Al Arabiya Post.
According to reports, there has been a change in the content being shown on private TV channels. Critical news bulletins, political debates, entertainment and music shows, foreign dramas are replaced with programmes tailored to the Taliban government.
According to the media outlet, things have drastically changed since the Taliban took over the war-ravaged nation. Journalists in Afghanistan are feeling hopeless and scared as the spirit of journalism they built is "ceasing to exist now". Ever since the insurgents captured Kabul, several journalists have reportedly been killed or tortured, and a number of media outlets have shut.
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Dawa Khan Menapal, the Director of Afghanistan's Government Information Media Center in Kabul was killed in the first week of August. Two days later, journalist Toofan Omar of Paktia Ghag Radio was murdered by the Taliban fighters. Soon after Kabul fell, Taliban fighters began looking for journalists--many were tortured while some were killed, reported Al Arabiya Post.
There are incidences of Taliban fighters snatching cameras and equipment from journalists and even robbing them.
Journalists covering protests by Afghani people are being detained and implicated under false cases under draconian laws.
According to the media outlet, two journalists from Etilaatroz newspaper were beaten mercilessly by the militants for just covering a protest event. Taqi Daryabi and Nematullah Naqdi were taken to the police station and assaulted brutally. Daryabi reportedly said that the Taliban fighters used sticks, rubber, “whatever they had in their hands”.
"Using sticks, police sticks, rubber - whatever they had in their hands. The scar on my face is from shoes where they kicked me in the face. I was unconscious after that so they stopped," recalled Daryabi.
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Many journalists have gone into hiding, deleted their social media accounts and their news stories from the past, which were critical of the Taliban, reported Al Arabiya Post.
While journalists are forced to flee from the country, the Taliban has asked women journalists, to stop working and stay home. Two women news TV anchors were sent off-air at the public broadcaster Radio Television Afghanistan by the Taliban soon after it declared independence, reported Al Arabiya Post.
As per the Reporters Without Border, a United Nations- recognised non-profit, 4,940 employees were working in 108 news outlets in Kabul in 2020, and 1080 of them were women including 700 journalists. Now, the number of women journalists has slumped to below 100.
Many media outlets have shut since the Taliban captured Kabul. Yet, there are a few media houses in Afghanistan, which have decided to continue doing journalism despite the financial crunch, hostile environment and threats from the Taliban. Tolo TV and Pajhwok news agency are some of the few news outlets, which are exploring alternatives like working from overseas to ensure happenings in Afghanistan reach everyone, reported Al Arabiya Post.
A group of 150 Afghan journalists has asked the UN and the international community to protect them from the threats being issued by the Taliban.
(With inputs from agency)
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