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News items
Member of Afghan journalist association killed in Kabul
Monday 6 September

source : Afghan Voice Agency(AVA) Unknown armed men shot dead an Afghan journalist, called Seyd Hamid Noori, who is also a member of Afghan National Journalist Association, in Afghan capital Kabul on Sunday night, an official said on Monday.

"Noori was killed in precinct nine near his house last night," a police official who declined to be named told Xinhua.

No groups or individuals have yet to claim responsibility for the murder.

Over a dozen journalists have been killed in several incidents in war-torn Afghanistan over the past couple of years.

 
A blast occurred in 3rd Macrorayan of Kabul
Wednesday 21 July
A blast occurred in 3rd Macrorayan of Kabul few mints ago. The Interior Ministry press office and the Head of Criminal Dept. confirmed the blast but there is no details regarding to the event. An eyewitness said that the explosive material was transferring by a bicycle rider. (MORE)
 
Death toll from Pakistan bomb attack reaches 102
Saturday 10 July
The death toll from a suicide attack in a volatile border region of Pakistan climbed to 102 on Saturday, showing the militants’ continued ability to stage deadly strikes despite losing ground in army offensives. The Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), or Taliban Movement of Pakistan, claimed responsibility for Friday’s attack in Mohmand, a Pashtun region (MORE)
 
No agreement with Pakistan to train Afghan troops
Sunday 4 July
The Ministry of Defence (MoD) on Thursday rejected a report published in an influential US newspaper that said President Karzai has agreed to send a group of military officers to Pakistan for training. (MORE)
 
105 Megawatts Power Station Built in Kabul
Sunday 27 June
Officials in the Ministry of Water and Energy said on Sunday that a power station is built with a cost of $300 million dollars. (READ MORE)
 
Afghanistan / Karzai / Media law /
Government violates media law by closing TV station (Afghanistan)
Friday 30 July 2010
by آزادمنش
popularity : 2%

Afghanistan:

PNG Friday 30 July 2010, by Reporters Without Borders

Reporters Without Borders condemns the Afghan governments latest interference in the media. The cabinet decided on 27 July to close down the privately-owned TV station Emroz for allegedly endangering national unity and to ban two programmes on two other TV stations on the ground that they were contrary to Islamic values.

The government must not under any circumstances violate the media law, which gives the media commission sole decision-making authority when a media commits an offence, Reporters Without Borders said. We call on the government to rescind these decisions and never interfere in the content of Afghan TV stations again.

When it met on 27 July, the cabinet ordered the ministry of culture and information and the attorney general to shut down Emroz, a station launched in August 2006 that is known for taking anti-Iranian and anti-Shiite positions.

Defending the decision, deputy culture and information minister Jalal Norani said it was important to insist on national values and interests.

Emroz owner Najibolah Kabuli described the stations closure as an act of revenge by pro-Iranian pressure groups. He added: Since 2009, our station has been organising a series of demonstrations in various cities against Irans anti-Afghan policies.

Media wars are nothing new in Afghanistan. Media backed by different political parties and foreign countries have been waging a news and information war since 1998. Emroz and Shemshad on the one hand, and Tamadon, a station that supports Afghanistans Shiite leaders, on the other, have been bitter rivals. The rivalry between the media reflects a battle for influence among the countries that support them, above all Iran and Pakistan.

Speaking on condition of anonymity in March 2009, a TV journalist told Reporters Without Borders: In what country can a powerful neighbour fund three TV stations? Irans influence has grown, but so has the influence of Pakistan and the United States.

The cabinet also decided at its 27 July meeting to ban Del and Nadel, a programme broadcast by the privately-owned TV station Yak, and Bazi Bakhat, a programme broadcast by the privately-owned Tolo TV. Both programmes were accused of being anti-Islamic.

The Union of Afghan Journalists and NAI, a press freedom organisation, said in a joint statement said the cabinets decisions could be dangerous for freedom of expression. While not defending the programmes and editorial policies of the three stations, they said it was the job of the media commission and it alone to determine whether a media was guilty of an offence and to take decisions affecting the media.

The charge of being anti-Islamic is one of the most common grounds for censoring media in Afghanistan. Although it lacks any precise definition, it is often used by the authorities to ban TV programmes.

For more information about the press freedom situation in Afghanistan, read the report that Reporters Without Borders released in March 2009: Report of fact-finding mission: Press freedom in free-fall in run-up to presidential election (http://en.rsf.org/afghanistan-repor...)