From VOA:
“Survey Finds 40% of Afghan
Media Disappeared Since Taliban Takeover”
(Taliban members (R) attack
journalists covering a women's rights protest in Kabul on October 21, 2021.)
A new survey finds that at least
40 percent of media outlets in Afghanistan have disappeared and more than 80
percent of women journalists lost their jobs since the Islamist Taliban seized
control of the country in mid-August. Reporters Without Borders (RSF) conducted
the study with its local partner, the Afghan Independent Journalists
Association (AIJA), and released the findings Tuesday about Afghanistan’s once
booming and vibrant national media. It lamented that the environment for
journalists in the capital, Kabul, and the rest of the country has become
“extremely fraught” since the Taliban takeover.
“Of the 543 media outlets tallied
in Afghanistan at the start of the summer, only 312 were still operating at the
end of November,” according to the survey. More than 6,400 journalists and
media employees have lost their jobs since August 15 when the Taliban seized
control of the Afghan capital, Kabul. “Proportionally, women have been hit much
more: more than four out of five (84%) have lost their jobs since the Taliban
takeover, as against one out of every two men (52%),” the survey noted. There
are no working women journalists in 15 of the Afghanistan’s 34 provinces. The
northern province of Jowzjan used to have 19 media outlets employing 112 women,
now none of the 12 media outlets still operating is employing a woman. The
study used the figures for the previous situation from a survey conducted by
media outlets and journalists operating in Afghanistan before the Taliban
seized control of the country. The Taliban in many municipalities have
allegedly demanded that local media not employ any women journalists.
Most of the Afghan provinces had
at least 10 privately owned media outlets just four months ago, but now some
regions have almost no local media at all. “The central Kabul region, which had
more media that anywhere else, has not been spared the carnage. It has lost
more than one of every two media outlets (51%). Of the 148 tallied prior to 15
August, only 72 are still operating,” the study found. Of the 1,100 women
journalists and media workers counted in the capital at the start of August,
only 320 are now working – a 73% drop.
Hundreds of journalists have also
left Afghanistan since August for fear of Taliban reprisals or because of
problems associated with practicing their profession under Taliban rule. Since establishing
their acting government in September, the Taliban have issued a set of
“journalism rules,” including media compliance with the Taliban interpretation
of Islamic doctrine on “enjoying good and forbidding wrong.” The survey
described the guidelines as dangerous, saying they open the way to censorship
and persecution, and deprive journalists of their independence. Taliban
officials have repeatedly denied allegations they are behind dozens of
incidents of violence or stifling media freedom.
Reporters Without Borders quoted
Taliban government spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid as telling the media watchdog
his government supports “freedom for the media in the defined framework for
preserving the country’s higher interests, with respect for the Sharia and
Islam.” When asked about some 40 incidents of violence against journalists
since August 15, Mujahid said efforts are being made to train and control the
behavior of Taliban security forces. Taliban harassment alone is not blamed for
the shrinking Afghan media landscape. Many media outlets were receiving
national as well international funding that ended when the Islamist group
seized control. Their economic troubles have been exacerbated byf a loss of
advertising revenue. There is an urgent need to rein in the spiral leading
inevitably to the disappearance of Afghan media and to ensure that respect for
press freedom is a priority,” said Reza Moini, the head of RSF’s
Iran-Afghanistan desk. “Beyond the numbers, the closure of nearly half of the
country's media and the loss of more than 6,000 jobs are a disaster for press
freedom,” IAJA Executive-Director Hojatollah Mujadadi said.
Afghanistan has been regularly
listed in recent years as one of the most dangerous countries for journalists.
It was ranked 122nd out of 180 countries in the World Press Freedom Index that
RSF published last April.
^ Sadly this survey doesn’t
surprise me and I actually think the numbers are much higher. ^
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