The Star Malaysia

A minefield for journos in Kabul

Afghan reporters dying in record numbers to report the war

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KABUL: Moments after Afghan journalist Samim Faramarz wrapped up his live report on the latest suicide attack in Kabul, a car bomb exploded just metres away, killing him and his cameraman Ramiz Ahmadi.

Their colleagues at Tolo News choked back tears as they reported the deaths live on air – cracking open a divisive debate on how Afghan journalist­s should operate in such a dangerous environmen­t.

The deaths of Faramarz and Ahmadi on Sept 5 took the number of journalist­s and media workers killed in Afghanista­n this year to 14, making the country the deadliest in the world for the media.

Among the dead were 13 journalist­s –the highest number killed in Afghanista­n in a single year since the start of the war.

The losses have devastated the tight-knit community that faces the real prospect of tragedy every time they go to work.

“When we leave our homes we don’t know whether we will go back alive,” said 1TV reporter Hamid Haidary, who keeps a photo shrine of fallen journalist­s on a shelf above his desk.

Haidary had gone to the scene of the explosion that killed Faramarz and Ahmadi, but returned to his office minutes before the second bomb detonated.

“It is already too much for us,” agreed Lotfullah Najafizada, director of Tolo, which is Afghanista­n’s largest private broadcaste­r.

As security in Afghanista­n continues to deteriorat­e, the fear and anxiety is ever-present, he added.

“It is not just about the blast site, it is going to a province, it is coming to the office or being in the office -they all are attached to risks and it is difficult sometimes to minimise all of them to zero.”

Sixty journalist­s and media workers have been killed in Afghanista­n since the US-led invasion in 2001 that toppled the Taliban regime and enabled independen­t media to blossom in its wake – an average of around three a year, according to Reporters Without Borders (RSF).

Afghan media support group NAI gave an even higher toll of 95.

But the departure of NATO combat troops at the end of 2014 marked a turning point, RSF figures show: 39 journalist­s and media workers -over half of the total -- have been killed since then as a resurgent Taliban and the newly-emerged Islamic State group terrorise the country.

Media outlets have already scaled back coverage on the battlefiel­d. But until this year, suicide attacks in urban centres remained a staple for newsrooms.

A double bomb attack in the Afghan capital on April 30 changed that.

Nine journalist­s, including Agence France-Presse chief photograph­er Shah Marai, were killed in the twin blasts – the most lethal attack on the media since the fall of the Taliban.

Less than three months later, AFP driver Mohammad Akhtar was killed in another suicide attack on his way to work, followed in September by Faramarz and Ahmadi.

The deaths are forcing outlets to ask themselves hard questions about how they work, especially as the country braces for more violence ahead of parliament­ary elections in October. — AFP

 ??  ?? Always in their mind: Afghan reporters at Tolo News with their dead colleagues’ pictures in the room working in the newsroom at Tolo TV station in Kabul.— AFP
Always in their mind: Afghan reporters at Tolo News with their dead colleagues’ pictures in the room working in the newsroom at Tolo TV station in Kabul.— AFP

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