City
Epaper

318 Afghan media outlets closed since Taliban takeover

By IANS | Updated: February 5, 2022 08:50 IST

Kabul, Feb 5 At least 318 media outlets in Afghanistan have closed since the Taliban took over the ...

Open in App

Kabul, Feb 5 At least 318 media outlets in Afghanistan have closed since the Taliban took over the country in August last year, the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) said.

In a report released this week, the IFJ expressed concerns over the status of Afghan media community, reports TOLO News.

"The crisis has hit newspapers the hardest with just 20 out of 114 continuing to publish," the report read.

"Fifty-one TV stations, 132 radio stations and 49 online media outlets have ceased operations."

Based on the report, only 2,334 journalists are still employed "from a pre-Taliban high of 5,069".

Seventy-two per cent of journalists who lost their jobs are women, according to the IFJ. Currently, 243 women are still employed.

"From threats to draconian reporting restrictions and from economic collapse to the withdrawal of development funding the picture is catastrophic, not just for journalists who have lost their jobs or been forced to flee but also for citizens who are being denied access to information," IFJ General Secretary Anthony Bellanger said.

The Afghan media community called on the Taliban government to help the media gain access to information.

"If the immediate steps are taken towards the situation of the media in the country, only some certain number of media organizations will be active in Afghanistan in the near future," TOLO News quoted Hujatullah Mujadidi, head of the Head of the Afghan Independent Journalists Association, as saying on Friday.

"We call on the international community to invest in media to protect the process of access to information in the current Afghan situation," said Hafizullah Barakzai, head of the Afghanistan Journalists Council.

Some journalists called on the international community to address the collapse of the Afghan media community.

"If the restrictions imposed on media remain in force, the media organisations will stop operating and will collapse," said Samiullah Pam, a journalist.

"We call on the international community to seriously consider the situation of the Afghan media. We call on the government to assist with the media in access to information," journalist Naseem said.

This comes as the Taliban announced earlier that the Media Violation Commission and a Joint Commission of media and the government would be established soon.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: KabulAfghanistanTalibanInternational federation of journalistsAnthony bellangerHafizullah barakzai
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalEarthquake in Afghanistan: Quake of Magnitude 5.9 Strikes Hindu Kush Region; Tremors Felt in Delhi-NCR

InternationalEarthquake of Magnitude 4.7 on Richter Scale Hits Afghanistan

Fact Check: Old Video of Afghan Fans Celebrating Wrongly Linked to India’s ICC CT 2025 Victory

CricketChampions Trophy 2025: Australia Enters Semi-Finals After Rain Abandoned Match vs Afghanistan

Cricket“Inspired Generations to…”: Ibrahim Zadran Thanks Sachin Tendulkar for His Praise After Afghanistan’s Historic Win Over England in Champions Trophy 2025

International Realted Stories

InternationalPakistani military operation in Mastung triggers protests over abductions, raids

InternationalJapan calls for global cooperation for nuclear disarmament towards 2026 UN conference

InternationalSouth Korea: PPP presidential primary narrowed to two final contenders

InternationalPakistani cybercriminals hack three websites of Rajasthan govt

InternationalKhalistan sympathiser Jagmeet Singh quits as NDP leader after defeat in Canada election