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AJC welcomes journalist’s release

author avatar
17 Jul 2013 - 21:27
author avatar
17 Jul 2013 - 21:27

KABUL Journalists Centre (AJC) on Wednesday welcomed the release of Azizur Rahman Sakhizada, a Kabul-based reporter with daily Mandegar, from a police detention facility.

Sakhizada was arrested in compliance with the attorney general’s orders on the basis of a judicial complaint from the High Office of Oversight and Anti-Corruption head, Azizullah Ludin, on July 5.

Mandegar Editor-in-Chief Nazari Paryani confirmed Sakhizada had been freed on bail but his dossier remained open. “I was asked to accompany the reporter to the attorney office on Saturday, July 20.”

Ludin’s complaint was triggered by a May 29 election story in the newspaper, saying senior officials within his office were involved in corruption and fraud.

Ludin filed his complaint although the newspaper published his written reply five days after the original story appeared.

Paryani said on July 16 the Ministry of Information and Culture invited him to participate in a “Media Complaint Commission” panel to review Ludin’s complaint.

“I was invited to the session to defend Sakhizada. Since this commission has no legal basis, I don’t want to participate at its panel and will not accept whatever comes out of it,” Paryani vowed.

Ludin is also involved in another judicial complaint against the paper, whose editor received a phone call that he had been awarded a 30-month jail sentence in absentia on June 5.

Paryani, who has appealed, was never told about the original trial held on March 2. He said: “In the current situation, with presidential and provincial elections due in 2014, followed by withdrawal of NATO troops, these actions against us may reflect a desire to impose limits on the freedom of information and to pressure the media to censor themselves.”

Under the relevant law, such complaints should be processed by the Media Commission, which may refer them to the judiciary. AFJC office-bearer Ahmad Quraishi said the commission was yet to be set up and the “arrest of a journalist, without being reviewed by the commission is an illegal act.”

Increasing violence

Last three months represented a harshest time for journalists, with the Afghanistan Journalists Centre recording 15 incidents of violence, including the murder of two media professionals, in Kunduz and Kapisa provinces.

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