Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Afghan women journalist­s and human rights activists are being forced into hiding

A wave of violence against female journalist­s and human rights activists is rocking Afghanista­n. As the government seems unable to protect them from attacks, many are hoping for support from the internatio­nal community.

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The women's activist Maria Makrami has been forced into hiding, seeking refuge in a safe house. She is the director of the Afghan Women Network (AWN), a nongovernm­ental organizati­on that has fought for years to empower women and ensure their equal place in Afghan society.

"I know I'm on the death list," she said in an interview with DW. The well-connected activist has received several threatenin­g emails and messages in recent months.

"Our situation is frightenin­g. Many women in our networks no longer leave their homes and are completely demoralize­d. After what happened yesterday in Jalalabad, I’m also completely devastated."

On March 2, three women were murdered: Mursal Wahidi, Sadia Sadat and Shahnaz Roafi.

They worked as announcers for Enikass, a private television station in the city of Jalalabad. On Tuesday, while walking home in broad daylight they were attacked by two armed men and shot dead in the street. Jalalabad, with a population of about 240,000, is the capital of the Nangarhar province in eastern Afghanista­n. Provincial police confirmed that one of the suspected perpetrato­rs had been arrested.

The suspect confessed to being a member of the radical Islamic Taliban, although Taliban spokesman Zabihollah Mojahed promptly denied the claim.

Afghanista­n's President Ashraf Ghani condemned the act. A statement from Ghani’s office read: "Such attacks on our compatriot­s, especially women, contradict the teachings of

Islam, Afghan culture and the spirit of freedom. They aggravate and prolong the current crisis and war."

Shortly after, the jihadi militia "Islamic State" (IS) claimed responsibi­lity for the killings. An IS statement confirmed that IS fighters had killed the female journalist­s "for working for one of the media outlets loyal to the breakaway Afghan government."

In December, IS also claimed responsibi­lity for the killing of another female journalist working for Enikass. The 26-yearold Malalai Maiwand, whose mother had also been murdered for activism five years earlier. After the shooting of Malalai Maiwand's mother, the situation for women's rights activists and journalist­s improved slightly, until late last year. Maria Akrami and other activists who helped with these advances can only watch as their achievemen­ts are reversed.

"The world community cannot just stand by and watch. We need support. This wave of brutal violence against women is unpreceden­ted and shameful," Akrami stressed in an interview with DW.

But even she is unsure who is behind the wave of attacks, as there are many armed groups and extremists in Afghanista­n. Despite the start of the internal Afghan peace talks in September 2020 between the radical Islamist Taliban and the government representa­tives, the situation has deteriorat­ed.

Extremists have killed 11 journalist­s and human rights activists between September 2020 and mid-February 2021, according to data released by the UN Mission in Afghanista­n (UNAMA) on February 15. According to the report, the targeted killings lowered the expectatio­ns of society as a whole for the peace process.

"The voices of human rights defenders and media profession­als should be heard more than ever. Instead, they are being silenced," said the UN Secretary-General's Special Representa­tive for Afghanista­n, Deborah Lyons.

The result is self-censorship and flight, with many journalist­s and activists already having left the country.

"The government has done nothing for them," journalist Aniseh Shahid told DW in February.

The 34-year-old journalist, who works for the TV channel TOLO, was lauded by Reporters Without Borders in July 2020 for her "courageous" reporting during the coronaviru­s pandemic in Afghanista­n. She is currently alarmed about the attacks on press freedom in her own country. Her colleague Yama Siawash, one of the bestknown TV presenters in Afghanista­n, was killed by a car bomb explosion on November 7.

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 ??  ?? Three female journalist­s were shot dead on March 2 in Jalalabad
Three female journalist­s were shot dead on March 2 in Jalalabad

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