From Yahoo:
“She's the face of Afghan
morning news. Here's what her career looks like under Taliban rule.”
For Yalda Ali just turning up to
work is an act of defiance. As the host of TOLO TV's "Good Morning,"
Ali, 25, is among a depleted number of female journalists still working in the
Afghan capital after the Taliban seized power. Those remaining now have to
strike what may be an impossible balance: Appearing in public and on the
airwaves to report without provoking the ire of their strict militant rulers. “I
have to be very careful about every single word, and also about the makeup that
I wear, how I dress and how I behave around men,” she told NBC News in an
interview Thursday. “We don’t know if we have freedom of speech ... so we have
to be careful so the Taliban don’t get crazy and we get harmed.” Yalda has only
been in the anchor's chair at this job for two weeks, since her predecessor
left Afghanistan when tens of thousands of people escaped as American troops
left the country.
After two decades of working
under laws that defended freedom of expression, Afghan journalists face an
uncertain future under the harsh new regime. Some have fled, others have been
beaten for simply for doing their jobs. It’s even more dangerous for women, who
have to navigate what they can and can’t do under the Taliban government. Under
the previous Taliban government, which was toppled by U.S.-backed forces in
2001, women were barred from attending school, holding jobs and leaving home
without male escorts. They had to wear all-encompassing burqas, they did not
appear on television and their voices weren't heard on the radio. Twenty years
later, the Taliban say they have changed. But the Taliban-run education
ministry asked boys from grades 7-12 back to school Saturday along with their
male teachers, with no mention of girls in those grades returning to school. The
country's rulers also set up a ministry for the “propagation of virtue and the
prevention of vice" in the building that once housed the Women's Affairs
Ministry. When women protested earlier this month for equal rights, security
forces responded violently, according to Human Rights Watch. Video
footagepublished by NBC News showed female protesters being whipped by a
Taliban fighter in Kabul.
Then last week the militants
announced that protests were now banned unless approved ahead of time and
journalists said they’ve been told covering unapproved protests is also now
illegal. Patricia Gossman, an associate director for the Asia division at Human
Rights Watch, said the Taliban had never accepted being held to account by the
public or the media and that wasn’t about to change now. “There is no tolerance
for dissent and any dissent will be met with brutally,” she said. Meanwhile,
the number of women journalists working in Afghanistan has plummeted. “Women
journalists are in the process of disappearing from the capital,” non-profit
group Reporters Without Borders warned on Aug. 31.
Last year, there were around 700
female journalists in Kabul, according to a joint survey by the group and the
Center for the Protection of Afghan Women Journalists. By the end of last month,
fewer than 100 were still formally working in privately-owned radio and TV
stations in the Afghan capital, according to an investigation by Reporters
Without Borders. Outside Kabul, the picture is even starker. Most women
journalists have been forced to stop working in the provinces, where almost all
privately-owned media outlets ceased operating as Taliban forces advanced, the
group said. Meanwhile, state-run broadcasts show displays of Taliban power. So
for Ali to go on air it takes guts, especially given TOLO TV's history with the
Taliban. The militants claimed responsibility for an attack in 2016 targeting
TOLO TV workers, which left seven people dead, accusing the channel of
“promoting obscenity, irreligiousness, foreign culture and nudity.” Ali is
pushing boundaries in other ways too. She still wears makeup, although less
than before, and while she dresses more conservatively, she continues to smile.
“In these conditions I come in front of the camera with all this fear in my
heart but I smile,” she said. “One smile can lift a nation for a day.”
^ It is brave Women like this one
that will eventually bring full equality for women throughout Afghanistan. ^
https://news.yahoo.com/afghan-tv-host-smiles-camera-093109308.html?fr=sycsrp_catchall
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