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Media freedom under threat in Afghanistan
Kabul, 23rd April
2008
Media freedom, enshrined within the
Afghan Constitution, is today facing a crisis. The Government’s continued
manipulation of media for political gain, shrouded under the banner of Islam,
has escalated with recent moves by the Ministry of Information and Culture to
ban the broadcast of popular Indian produced family dramas.
The Ministry of Information and
Culture has bypassed appropriate legal channels and issued an edict to
broadcasters to cease broadcasting Indian produced drama .This action fails to
engage the appropriate legal process of addressing the media complaints
commission, who are empowered to consider and refer relevant cases to the
courts.
The banned serials, already
broadcast for two and a half years, have been universally popular across the
traditionally conservative Afghan society. Whilst other stations have bowed to
this pressure, there is a consensus among the independent stations that this
order is illegal. In the interests of supporting a free media, TOLO TV will
continue to broadcast its programs.
“TOLO TV is Afghan owned and
operated and has always broadcast within the boundaries of our media laws and
respected the values of our Islamic society.
“The series currently under focus
are all family oriented and conservative; their universal popularity with our
audiences should provide any commonsense test of such. The Ministry’s sudden
interest in them, after years of broadcast, is more in line with hobbling the
development of free media and debate in Afghanistan. The fact that there are
elections in 2009 should be lost on no one when assessing what is motivating the
Ministry’s actions.
“TOLO TV has achieved its position
of market leader through its focus on providing quality, appropriate
entertainment as well as rigorous and fair news and current affairs. We have
developed programs that promote ethnic tolerance, education, equality, democracy
and health. Our news and current affairs teams have been rigorous in dealing
with the scourges of our society, including corruption, extremism, the narcotic
trade and human rights abuses.
“The Ministry’s continued and
legally baseless efforts to hinder rather than support free media is a critical
issue for broadcasters, the people of Afghanistan and those in the international
community who believe in free media as a path to redevelopment of this nation”
said Jahid Mohseni, COO of TOLO TV.
A free and fair media is critical
for Afghanistan as the country moves towards its national elections scheduled
for 2009. TOLO TV, together with the Afghan National Journalists Union, is
calling on all Afghans and members of the international community to ensure that
Afghanistan’s media industry is allowed to operate within the boundaries of its
common law and constitution, and not subjected to the political control of the
current Ministry.
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