Afghan
Taliban open new front in war with attacks on media
KABUL, Afghanistan — The Taliban suicide bombing against a bus carrying
employees of Afghanistan’s biggest media
company last month has shocked local journalists, who fear they are now in the
cross hairs of an increasingly lethal insurgency.
Journalism has always been a dangerous line of work in
Afghanistan, and reporters have long had to contend with threats and occasional
attacks by various armed groups. But after Tolo TV, the most popular Afghan
broadcaster, falsely accused the Taliban of mass rape in a report carried late
last year, the insurgents declared war.
“We saw in late 2015 a statement from the very highest
levels of the Taliban staking out a very clear position that they are going to
be deliberately targeting as ‘military
objectives’ two of Afghanistan’s largest TV networks,” said Ahmad Shuja,
a researcher with the New York-based Human Rights Watch.
Calling it “a watershed moment,” he said the
Taliban now equate attacks on media with “any other military
operations they’ve done and taken credit for — and the implications are chilling.”
In the Jan. 20 attack, a suicide bomber
struck a bus belonging to the Moby Group, Tolo’s
owner, killing seven people and wounding at least 25. The Taliban claimed
responsibility, calling Tolo a tool of decadent Western influence and warning
that other media outlets could be next.
The Taliban were angered by a Tolo report last year alleging
that the insurgents had raped female university students during their brief
occupation of the northern city of Kunduz. The station has acknowledged the
allegations were false and said it clarified the report, but the Taliban have
shown no sign of backing down.
“The Taliban came to the conclusion that media have become
an obstacle against their war strategies, and they would have (attacked) it
anyway,” said Najib Sharifi, director of the
Afghan Journalists’ Safety Committee. “But the incident in the Kunduz report gave the Taliban an
excuse on which to build and further to justify their attacks.”
Afghanistan’s intelligence service said it has arrested eight people in
connection with the Tolo attack, all associated with the Haqqani network, a
close Taliban ally based in neighboring Pakistan.
But many journalists have yet to return
to work, fearing further attacks. An executive at 1TV, the other major media
outlet that was threatened, said the intelligence service told him to move to a
new home and buy a weapon. He also said a car bomb was recently defused outside
the station’s gate. The executive spoke on condition
of anonymity out of safety concerns.
The escalation in violence has cast a pall over the surprisingly
vibrant media landscape that emerged after the 2001 U.S.-led invasion toppled
the Taliban.
Afghanistan has 75 television networks, 175 radio stations and
hundreds of newspapers, magazines and websites employing thousands of
journalists, mainly young people who came of age after the brutal rule of the
Taliban, who banned television. Afghan journalists are often alone in reporting
from the front lines of the conflict, and have defied intimidation to challenge
claims by the government, local warlords and the insurgents.
Reporters Without Borders ranked Afghanistan 122nd out of 180
countries in its World Press Freedom Index last year, up from the previous year
but well below 2004, when Afghanistan was 97th. The low ranking reflects the
dangers faced by local journalists, who work in conflict zones and face threats
from all sides.
“Not all of us are everyday heroes,” Shuja said. “There’s only a certain amount of risk that all of us can take in
the face of a diabolical enemy such as the Taliban.”
Relatives of those killed and wounded in the bus attack have
complained about the security measures taken by Moby.
“What really kills me is that Tolo knew about the threats,
even on that day, and didn’t insist on
sending them in smaller cars, rather than in one bus — and then they were all attacked,” said Zahara Mirzaee, whose 25-year-old daughter Zainab, a
boom operator, was killed.
The Afghanistan Journalists’ Federation has called on media owners to provide
protection and compensation for their employees in accordance with existing
laws. President Ashraf Ghani has promised to support and monitor media safety
through a ministerial commission.
The Mirzaee family meanwhile fears for
another daughter, Golsum, 27, who works at 1TV dubbing Turkish soap operas into
Farsi. She hasn’t returned to work since the attack,
despite the fact that she and her late sister were supporting the family.
“I’m afraid, but I just don’t know what to do,” she said. “If I don’t go back to work,
then there will be no money coming in... I was going to go back yesterday, but
I heard that the security service defused a car bomb at the gate. The risk is
now very high.”
O'Donnell,
Lynne. "Afghan Taliban open new front in war with attacks on media."
2 Feb. 2016. The
Washington Post. 2 Feb. 2016. <https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/asia_pacific/afghan-taliban-open-new-front-in-war-with-attacks-on-media/2016/02/02/11d27530-c975-11e5-b9ab-26591104bb19_story.html>.
Response:
The article presents
information about the tension in Afghanistan between the media and Taliban. It
gives information of the fear inside the country for those who work in the
media department of the country, such as TV networks. The article seems to be informative
without bias. The attacks against media need to stop in that it is killing
innocent people who were only doing their jobs without trying to harm someone
else. Possible way of doing this would be to raise the security on the part of
the TV networks or other sources of media.
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