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It takes four or five hours to get permission and by then everything has been cleaned up.” “If there is an accident, or an attack, you can’t go there directly to take photos, you have to speak to the Taliban first to get approval,” he said. There is no money to pay his salary, but even more of a problem is informal Taliban regulations that make working as a news photographer virtually impossible. “Either we have to leave the country, or we have to get another job.”
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“When I meet friends, they say ‘the media is finished’,” said Habibullah, a photographer in the northern city of Mazar-e-Sharif who is planning to become a taxi driver. That means far less news coming out of Afghanistan, just when the country is on the brink of a catastrophic humanitarian crisis, and the expansion of the regional Islamic State franchise makes its security an international concern.
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Over 250 newspapers, radio and TV stations closed in the first 100 days of Taliban rule, and about 70% of journalists have lost their jobs, according to Afghan press watchdog NAI. The economic collapse has pummelled smaller outlets too. Dozens of journalists terrified of reprisals for their reporting fled the country, others went into hiding, and many women were forced from their positions.
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Recently I heard about an incident in the city, and I wasn’t even interested in sending anyone to check it out.”Īfghanistan’s thriving media sector was seen as one of the few success stories of the past two decades, a standout in a region where censorship, arrests and even murders of journalists are more common than support for a free press.īut with the return of the Taliban, the industry is in freefall. “The Taliban asked us to share anything before we broadcast it, so now we just repeat news that has gone out on official stations.