• April 1, 2008 2:43 PM
  • - General
  • - Publishing

Afghanistan - New offensive against privately-owned TV stations by information ministry and Council of Ulemas


    MONTREAL, April 1 /CNW Telbec/ - Reporters Without Borders is shocked by
a campaign being waged by the ministry of information and culture, the lower
house of parliament and the Council of Ulemas against privately-owned TV
stations, especially Tolo TV, for broadcasting footage of men and women
dancing together.
    "It is regrettable that, through the ministry of information and culture,
the government is supporting a campaign launched by fundamentalists against
privately-owned TV stations," the press freedom organisation said. "How does
the broadcasting of such images harm Afghan culture?"
    Reporters Without Borders added: "We urge information and culture
minister Abdulkarim Khoram to take back what he has said and to stop
interfering in Afghan television content. We express our full support for Tolo
TV, to which we gave an award in 2005 for its commitment to free expression."
    The Council of Ulemas and the information and culture ministry announced
on 30 March that the broadcasting of some Indian films and TV series, regarded
as anti-Islamic, was to be banned by 14 April. The Afghan media received a
note from the information and culture ministry supporting these bans. It named
three series that TV stations were no longer to broadcast: Kamkam (on the
Ariyana television station), Emtahan Zendehghi and Zamane Khosho Ham Haros Bud
(on Tolo TV) and Dar Entezar (on Noorin).
    The day before, the information and culture ministry issued a release (of
which Reporters Without Borders has a copy) condemning a programme the
previous day on Tolo TV showing men and women dancing together. This was
"against the beliefs and traditions of Afghanistan's Islamic society," the
ministry said. A Tolo TV representative told Reporters Without Borders that in
the programme (a re-transmission of the "Afghan Oscars"), most of the women
had their heads covered, and that the movements of the dancers were "very
restrained."
    Tolo TV representatives were summoned to appear before the parliament's
Media Commission on 30 March at the ministry's request. They argued in their
defence that programmes showing dancers were not unusual on Afghan television,
including the state TV channel, and that the dance sequence that caused
controversy was taken from a film that had been approved by the Afghan film
board.
    The lower house of parliament (Wolesi Jirga) adopted a resolution
yesterday ordering the Afghan media to stop carrying "sensual" images
(mobtazal) and saying foreign dancers should no longer be invited to
Afghanistan. It also told the media to stop carrying advertising for banks
offering loans on which interest is payable. But it postponed the discussion
on the proposal to ban all singing and dancing by women on television.
    Conservative parliamentarians were very critical of Tolo TV, and former
warlord Abdul Rab-Rasoul Sayyaf called for the station to be banned. "Tolo
conspires on behalf of foreigners," he said. "I already said this two years
ago and no one took me seriously although I provided the government with
evidence." Other parliamentarians, including Fawzia Kufi, who represents the
province of Badakhshan, condemned these violations of press freedom.
    The Council of Ulemas already asked President Hamid Karzai in January to
ban Tolo TV and other privately-owned TV stations on the grounds that they
were anti-Islamic.
    Meanwhile, leading writer and journalist Rahnaward Zaryab appears to have
escaped a murder attempt on 29 March when an armed man approaching his home in
the Kabul district of Makrooyan was chased away by neighbours.
    Two journalists are currently detained in Afghanistan. One is Sayed
Perwiz Kambakhsh, now held in Kabul after being sentenced to death by a court
in the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif. The other is Jawed Ahmad, a journalist
working for Canadian Television (CTV), who is being held by the US military at
Bagram airbase, north of Kabul.



For further information: Hélène Fargues, Reporters Without Borders
Canada, (514) 521-4111