Bloodiest year for Afghan journalists ever: AJSC


nsnbc : The Afghan Journalists Safety Committee (AJSC) says that 2017 was the “bloodiest” year ever for journalists and other media personnel working in Afghanistan. The Taliban and the Islamic State (IS) were blamed for much of the violence but government officials were also involved in violence and intimidation.

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The Afghan Journalists Safety Committee (AJSC) release a report on January 11,  saying that 20 journalists and media workers were killed in 2017, an increase from 13 deaths in 2016.

The Committee said there were 169 reported cases of violence and threats against journalists on the job, with 12 of them directed toward female media workers. In 2106, AJSC documented 101 such cases.

The report said “terrorist groups” such as the Taliban and IS were responsible for “all cases of the killings of journalists.” The Taliban was blamed for the deaths of 18 journalists, while IS was blamed for two.

The government in Kabul has been fighting the Taliban since the U.S.-led invasion of 2001 drove them from power. The Islamic State (a.k.a IS, ISIS, ISIL, Daesh ISIS-K) and other terror groups have also begun operating in Afghanistan, often attacking mosque worshippers and government and security officials, along with journalists.

The Kabul-based AJSC said in its regular six-months report “An unprecedented increase in threats and violence against journalists has created serious concern about the survival of freedoms of expression and press.”

“Because freedom of expression, freedom of press, and media pluralism are among the country’s most important achievements in the past 16 years, the threat to media is considered a threat to the country’s overall progress,” added the group, which describes itself as an independent, nonprofit organization supporting press freedom in Afghanistan.

The report also blamed government workers for some of the attacks on the press, saying they are responsible for 34 percent of the “violence and intimidation against journalists.”

In 2017, the majority of incidents of violence against media personnel took place in Kabul and in northern provinces — specifically Parwan, Kapisa, and Panjsher. The safest areas for journalists were in the southeastern provinces, the report said.

“Although the government’s leadership has made many commitments to protect journalists and collaborate with the media — issuing numerous decrees for protecting journalists — these official measures have failed to deliver the desired results in reducing violence against journalists,” the AJSC said.

Along with direct violence, the report cited examples of intimidation against media outlets by the Taliban and IS, leading to situations of “self-censorship.” It said that in “insecure provinces” such as Ghazni, Logar, and Pakitia, the extremist groups have forced the media to avoid broadcasting and printing content that includes “female songs, music, promotional ads of security forces, and ads related to the peace process.”

In a report last month, the international Reporters Without Borders (RSF) said that 65 professional journalists, citizen-journalists, and media workers were killed across the world in 2017, representing an 18 percent decline from the 2016 figure.

F/AK – nsnbc 13.01.2017



Source Article from https://nsnbc.me/2018/01/13/bloodiest-year-for-afghan-journalists-ever-ajsc/

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