Afghan journalists fear country going dark as Taliban bans images of ā€˜living thingsā€™

by Pelican Press
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Afghan journalists fear country going dark as Taliban bans images of ā€˜living thingsā€™

The Talibanā€™s ban on images and videos of ā€œliving thingsā€ will make it harder to cover Afghanistan, journalists in the country said.

The Afghan ministry for vice and virtue has directed media platforms in Maidan Wardak, Kandahar and Takhar provinces to not show images of ā€œliving things with a soulā€, taken as meaning people and animals. On Thursday, a new province Helmand joined the list and banned all media from showing images of living things to ensure compliance with the Talibanā€™s morality laws.

Taliban officials in Helmand said the filming and photography of living things would stop immediately but did not give any further information about enforcement or exceptions.

A ministry spokesperson, Saif ul Islam Khyber, confirmed to the Associated Press that Taliban-run media stopped showing images of living things in some provinces on Tuesday to comply with the new law.

The ban, part of a set of ā€œmorality lawsā€ published by the ministry in August, does not extend to visuals of the Talibanā€™s more prominent leaders.

In effect, this means journalists can no longer take pictures or videos of people and animals. Photojournalists in particular fear that the restrictions will harm their livelihoods.

ā€œWhat is allowed? Photos of buildings, banners, and empty spaces. Landscapes and mountains are also allowed for now,ā€ an Afghan photojournalist told The Independent, speaking anonymously for fear of reprisal from the Taliban.

ā€œIt is a worsening situation for me and other photojournalists. This puts an end to our work of taking photos. If I donā€™t take pictures, then I donā€™t get paid. I get paid for the photographs I send to news agencies.ā€

Afghan boys walk past a defaced wall mural reading ā€˜Peace for me is the right to voteā€™ along a street in Kabul on 16 October (AFP via Getty)

Afghan boys walk past a defaced wall mural reading ā€˜Peace for me is the right to voteā€™ along a street in Kabul on 16 October (AFP via Getty)

The photojournalist, who freelances for an international news agency in southern Afghanistan, fears the prohibition, issued in keeping with the Talibanā€™s interpretation of Shariah law, is another weapon in their arsenal to harass media workers.

Afghanistan is the only country to impose such a prohibition, an eerie reminder of the Talibanā€™s previous rule in the late 1990s.

ā€œGovernment officials harass photographers and bar us from taking pictures every time we are at a venue. We are also not openly accepted at media briefings and press events. Local Taliban leaders also stop us from taking pictures of women even if they are wearing hijab or burqa. The ban will pick up pace slowly in the coming days. I can only hope that foreign nations will step in and bring us out of Afghanistan,ā€ he said.

Afghan women journalists attend a press conference in Kabul, Afghanistan, on 19 September 2024 (AFP via Getty)Afghan women journalists attend a press conference in Kabul, Afghanistan, on 19 September 2024 (AFP via Getty)

Afghan women journalists attend a press conference in Kabul, Afghanistan, on 19 September 2024 (AFP via Getty)

A photojournalist who covered Afghanistan until the Taliban took Kabul by force and overthrew the Ashraf Ghani government in 2021 claims that the edict marks the beginning of the end for the outside world to witness atrocities and human rights violations in Afghanistan.

ā€œMake no mistake, this is one of the last times the international community can have free access to photos and videos coming out of Afghanistan, some highlighting grave human right abuses,ā€ Massoud Hossaini, a Pulitzer-winning Afghan-born photojournalist, said. ā€œIt will now come at the cost of the safety of media workers.ā€

A photo shot by Massoud Hossaini in 2013 shows a young Afghan balloon seller running towards a customer in Kabul (AFP via Getty)A photo shot by Massoud Hossaini in 2013 shows a young Afghan balloon seller running towards a customer in Kabul (AFP via Getty)

A photo shot by Massoud Hossaini in 2013 shows a young Afghan balloon seller running towards a customer in Kabul (AFP via Getty)

Mr Hossaini, who worked for French news agency AFP, claims to have received death threats for doing his job even under the previous Western-backed government.

ā€œYou are taking pictures of women and men and everybody who does not want to be in the picture, and taking pictures is haram,ā€ he says he was told by local Afghan leaders.

ā€œWe are warning you, if you do not stop this we will punish you in the Islamic way. They meant death, not just flogging or prison.ā€



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