
Security personnel evacuate employees of the Shamshad TV
building after an attack in Kabul,
Afghanistan,
Tuesday, Nov. 7, 2017. photo massoud hossaini/AP
(BMLTV) NEW YORK, November 7, 2017 The Committee to Protect Journalists strongly condemns the attack on a television station today in Kabul, Afghanistan. Gunmen and suicide bombers this morning attacked Shamshad TV, a leading Pashto-language station, killing one security guard and injuring at least 20 people including television staffers, Shamshad TV’s CEO and broadcast director, Nasim Pakhtoon, told CPJ.
(BMLTV) NEW YORK, November 7, 2017 The Committee to Protect Journalists strongly condemns the attack on a television station today in Kabul, Afghanistan. Gunmen and suicide bombers this morning attacked Shamshad TV, a leading Pashto-language station, killing one security guard and injuring at least 20 people including television staffers, Shamshad TV’s CEO and broadcast director, Nasim Pakhtoon, told CPJ.
“The attack on Shamshad TV is an assault not just on one television station, but on press freedom in Afghanistan,” said CPJ Asia Program Coordinator Steven Butler from Washington D.C. “The Afghan government must do everything in its power to provide security for journalists and media workers.”
According to news reports, three attackers wearing police uniforms
entered the Shamshad TV compound; one detonated his suicide vest at the
compound gate. The other two attackers entered the building as employees fled
from a different exit, according The New York Times, which quoted the deputy spokesperson
for the Afghan Interior Ministry, Nasrat Rahimi.
Most of Shamshad TV’s 150 employees safely escaped the
building, according to The New York Times.
The SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors websites used by
violent extremist groups, reported that the Islamic State group claimed responsibility for the attack.
President Ashraf Ghani condemned the attack in a statement
and said terrorists would not be able to restrict the media through such acts
of violence, according to local reports.
Some of the injured have been receiving treatment at a
government hospital, Ilias Alami, operations manager at the Afghan Journalist
Safety Committee, told CPJ. Alami also said the casualties could have been much
higher if not for the building’s alternate exit routes and the station’s large
compound.
Shamshad TV, which broadcasts news and entertainment
programs via satellite, resumed broadcasting a few hours after the attack,
Pakhtoon said. Journalists in Afghanistan
continue to face security threats from non-state actors, CPJ research shows. In May, two media workers were killed in a bombing in Kabul
and, in a separate incident the same month, the Islamic State
attacked a state television station in Jalalabad, Afghanistan, killing six
people.
No comments :
Post a Comment