CPJ urges Karzai to protect Afghan media

January 17, 2008

President Hamid Karzai
Islamic Republic of Afghanistan
C/o The Embassy of Afghanistan
2341 Wyoming Avenue, NW
Washington, D.C. 20008

Via facsimile: 202-483-6487

 

Dear President Karzai,

The Committee to Protect Journalists is concerned about your government’s failure to push through proposed media reforms at a time when the Afghan press is growing increasingly restricted. As a nonpartisan, not-for-profit organization of journalists committed to supporting our colleagues around the world, CPJ is troubled by our findings on Afghanistan, which suggest that media policy is increasingly aimed at hampering journalists.

Long-debated amendments to Afghanistan’s media law were delayed when you declined to endorse them on December 26, according to many local journalists. Shaped by a joint commission of the upper and lower houses of parliament, with informed critiques from journalists and media commentators, the amendments represent a promising step toward reaffirming media freedom.

In the interim negotiating period, while the parliamentary houses choose whether to act on or overrule your suggestions, journalists are left vulnerable to prosecution for cultural transgressions as determined by the Ministry of Information and Culture. The ministry does so with the backing of the National Directorate of Security (NDS) and the Nationwide Council of Religious Scholars of Afghanistan.

There have been several incidents that are indications of this trend:

We do, however, applaud your recommendation for increased clarity in the proposed media bill regarding punishment for violations of new restrictions against insulting Islam, which were overly broad and open to misinterpretation.

As Afghanistan gears up for presidential and parliamentary elections in 2009, it is more important than ever to promote a professional media industry, free from the threat of reprisal and content restrictions on religious or any other grounds.

We ask that you intervene to ensure that the charges against Parwez Kambakhsh are immediately dropped and, on a broader scale, we encourage you to press for revisions to the media law that guarantee increased protection for journalists. We urge you to counteract the threat of prosecution for private TV stations and allow them to determine the cultural relevance of their own programming.

We ask, finally, that you fulfill your promise to develop Radio Television Afghanistan as a public media outlet, and take steps to reduce the Ministry of Information and Culture’s editorial and administrative influence over the broadcaster.

These actions will send a clear signal that you will not tolerate moves to restrict the media but rather to allow it to flourish as Afghanistan grows as a democracy.

Thank you for your attention to this important matter.

Sincerely,


Joel Simon
Executive Director

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