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Afghan Media Forced to Restrict Militant Attacks Coverage Due to Killing of Journalists
10 Sep, 2018 / 01:50 PM / Reeny Joseph

Source: http://www.omnesmedia.com

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Afghan media is becoming one of the most dangerous countries for journalists .They are facing growing pressure to cut back coverage of militant attacks following the death of two television reporters who were among 20 killed in an attack on a sports club in Kabul last week.

The recent developments have stressed the lack of press freedom for journalists in the country. Following an explosion in April that killed nine reporters, photographers and cameramen covering an attack, Afghanistan has been the deadliest country in the world for journalists this year, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists.

Last week Samim Faramarz, a reporter for Tolo News, and cameraman Ramiz Ahmadi were killed by a car bomb as they were covering a suicide attack at a wrestling club in Kabul. Their deaths came two and a half years after seven Tolo TV employees were killed by a Taliban suicide attacker who rammed a car bomb into a bus driving them home from the station.

Media coverage of attacks had already been noticeably reduced following the deadly blast in April and last week’s incident is likely to restrict coverage further, said Lotfullah Najafizada, head of Tolo News.

Afghanistan’s vibrant media sector has been one of the comparatively few undisputed success stories in the years following the overthrow of the Taliban, with the appearance of stations like Tolo as well as an array of competitors including 1TV, Ariana News, Shamshad TV and Khurshid TV.

With international media presence in Afghanistan sharply reduced since the withdrawal of international troops in 2014, domestic media outlets have filled the gap but their work has become increasingly difficult. Already large parts of the countryside, much of which is under the control of the Taliban, are out of bounds for journalists, who have been regarded with suspicion and sometimes outright hostility by the insurgents.

As the major cities still controlled by the government become increasingly dangerous, there would be more restrictions on coverage, less access and less support. For the journalists and media workers themselves, the growing roll call of colleagues killed while working is an increasingly oppressive fact of life.