Taliban detain journals over report on TV show censoring
Taliban intelligence men came in the night to arrest three staff of TOLO TV, one of Afghanan’s largest television stations, a channel executive said on Friday.
The country’s new rulers apparently didn’t like a story the broadcaster aired on their decision to ban foreign drama series from local television, said Khpalwak Sapai, head of TOLONews, who was among the three arrested.
Sapai, and Nafay Khaleeq, the station’s legal adviser, were released within hours, but the station presenter, Bahram Aman was still in custody Friday, Sapai told The Associated Press.
The intelligence officials from the Taliban’s General Directorate of Intelligence (GDI) came shortly after 8 pm Thursday to arrest the three. Sapai said the station was still seeking the release of Aman.
Mo Group, the media company that owns TOLO TV, said the detentions were “for publishing Tolo news about banning of the foreign drama series,” a decision made the Taliban’s Minry for the Propagation of Virtue and Prevention of Vice.
The Afghan-owned media company has interests in South and Central Asia as well as the Middle East and Africa.
The arrests were met with international outcry, including broader demands from the UN and the Committee to Protect Journals (CPJ) for the country’s rulers to stop harassing local journals and stifling free expression through threats, arrests and intimidation.
“The Taliban must immediately release journal Bahram Aman, a news presenter at independent broadcaster TOLOnews, and stop detaining and intimidating members of the Afghanan press corps,” a statement from the US-based CPJ said.
The United Nations Assance Mission in Afghanan (UNAMA) urged the same.
“UNAMA expresses its deep concern about the detentions of journals and the ever increasing restrictions being placed on media in Afghanan,” it said on Twitter. “Time for the Taliban to stop gagging & banning. Time for a constructive dialogue with the Afghan media community.”
Neither the Taliban’s information and culture minry nor its intelligence agency responded to requests from the AP for comment.
The CPJ statement said the Taliban’s intelligence service denied the arrests.
Since sweeping back to power last August, the Taliban have sent erratic signals about what the media landscape will look like under their rule, with international journals sometimes welcomed and Afghan media often attacked.
The ranks of journals in Afghanan thinned dramatically during the chaotic days of the US withdrawal last August when tens of thousands of Afghans fled or were evacuated foreign governments and organisations.
Many who stayed, and even those who have not had run-ins with the new Taliban rulers, say they are afraid of what tomorrow might bring.
The majority of TOLONews reporters and producers are women because Sapai, who was briefly detained, said he made a special effort to recruit and train Afghan women journals.
In December Reporters Without Borders and the Afghan Independent Journal Association found that 231 out of 543 media outlets had closed, while more than 6,400 journals lost their jobs after the Taliban takeover.
The outlets closed for lack of funds or because journals had left the country, according to the report.