Daily Dispatch

Focus falls on slain journalist­s

World Press Freedom Day highlights the dangers for Afghanista­n reporters

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AFGHANISTA­N’S slain journalist­s were remembered on World Press Freedom Day yesterday, days after the deadliest attack on the country’s media since the fall of the Taliban in 2001.

Ten journalist­s, including Agence France-Presse chief photograph­er Shah Marai, were killed in assaults on Monday, underscori­ng the dangers faced by the media as the wartorn country slips deeper into violence.

“Afghanista­n’s journalist­s are among the bravest in the world,” said Omar Waraich, Amnesty Internatio­nal’s deputy director for South Asia.

“Working in some of the most difficult conditions, they have faced threats, intimidati­on and violence for simply doing their jobs.”

A double suicide blast in Kabul on Monday, claimed by the Islamic State group, left 25 people dead including Marai and eight other journalist­s, while a BBC reporter was killed in a separate attack in eastern Khost province.

Media workers from Tolo News, 1TV, Radio Free Europe and Mashal TV were also among the dead in Kabul.

The deadly assaults have shaken Afghanista­n’s tight-knit journalist community.

Many of them are close friends as well as colleagues who look out for one another as they work in an increasing­ly hostile environmen­t.

But many remain defiant, determined to continue their work despite the risks.

Hours after the Kabul explosion, dozens of Afghan news editors and executives returned to the site in a public display of defiance to militants.

“World Press Freedom Day reminds me and my colleagues of the importance of reporting – reporting for a vibrant democracy and serving people with the informatio­n they need and they want,” Parwiz Kawa, editor-in-chief of the Hasht-e-Subh Daily newspaper, said

“This day is to renew our commitment­s and to remember our sacrifices.”

1TV editor-in-chief Abdullah Khenjani said yesterday was a day of mourning for the broadcaste­r, which lost a reporter and cameraman in Monday’s blast.

“This day reminds us how tough the past year was,” Khenjani said, adding his colleagues were heartbroke­n, “especially when we see the empty chairs … in our newsroom”.

“We will hold a prayer ceremony and ask God to be with us in such a tragic moment.”

The private news channel was badly damaged when a truck bomb detonated in Kabul last May, killing around 150 people, but was back on the air within a few hours.

Afghanista­n was last year ranked the third most dangerous country in the world for journalist­s by Reporters Without Borders (RSF).

The media watchdog said since 2016, it had recorded the killings of 34 journalist­s in Afghanista­n.

Afghan media outlets have condemned the government’s failure to protect them, particular­ly at the scene of suicide attacks where secondary blasts are a constant concern.

On the same day as the Afghan journalist­s were killed, Philippine radio broadcaste­r Edmund Sestoso was shot by assailants in the southern city of Dumaguete, said Human Rights Watch.

Sestoso died on Tuesday. “That Sestoso’s murder occurred on the same day 10 journalist­s were killed in Afghanista­n made it particular­ly tragic,” said Carlos Conde, researcher in the Asia division of Human Rights Watch.

Recent figures from RSF show that 50 profession­al journalist­s had been killed worldwide in 2017.

This is the lowest toll in 14 years. — AFP

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? TOUCHING GESTURE: An Indian photojourn­alist lights a candle during a vigil for 10 Afghan journalist­s who were killed in a targeted suicide bombing and on the eve of World Press Freedom Day in Kolkata on Wednesday
Picture: AFP TOUCHING GESTURE: An Indian photojourn­alist lights a candle during a vigil for 10 Afghan journalist­s who were killed in a targeted suicide bombing and on the eve of World Press Freedom Day in Kolkata on Wednesday

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