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Intimidation, Repression and Censorship: The Status of Access to Information and Freedom of Expression in Afghanistan

Rawadari (2024), 26 pp.
"The Taliban have revoked and suspended laws that included the right to access information and freedom of expression, and currently there is no effective legal mechanism to protect media outlets and journalists against interference and intimidation. This has led to widespread violation of the right to freedom of expression and access to information and has eliminated the ability of citizens to participate in government decision-making that impacts their lives. The findings of this report indicate that the Taliban, with complete disregard to Afghanistan’s international human rights commitments and the country’s pre-Taliban laws, have engaged in suppressing freedom of expression and media using various tools and methods, particularly imposing unlawful and discriminatory restrictions on women journalists. Currently, only a few women journalists are working with the media, conditional upon fully complying with the conditions set by the Taliban’s Ministry of Propagation of Virtue and Prevention of vice (MPVPV). In addition to this, the Taliban have engaged in persistent harassment and intimidation of media, arbitrary detention and torture of journalists, the detention and killing of protesters and imposing extensive restrictions on the activities of libraries, bookstores, and publishers. The provincial departments of MPVPV, Ministry of Information & Culture (MoIC), General Directorate of Intelligence (GDI), and Police Directorates are among the key institutions involved in suppression of freedom of expression and access to information. The Taliban have also dismantled accountability mechanisms such as independent judiciary, independent anti-corruption bodies and prevent media’s access to information on national budget expenditure, thus leading to administrative and financial corruption." (Introduction)
PART ONE - THE SITUATION OF ACCESS TO INFORMATION, 6
The absence of a legal mechanism to guarantee access to information -- Methods of providing information in the Taliban government -- Imposition of extensive restrictions on access to information -- Arrest, threat, and torture for providing information related to human rights violations -- Inspection and control of libraries -- Administrative corruption and lack of accountability
PART TWO: FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION AND MEDIA, 15
Abolishment of legal frameworks guaranteeing freedom of expression -- Reduction in the number of media outlets and journalists -- Restrictions imposed on the presence of women in the media -- The imposition of extensive restrictions on freedom of press -- Methods of control and suppression -- Arrest, torture, and killing of protesters -- Harassment, detention, and torture of journalists -- Failure to address cases of violence against journalists
PART THREE: CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS, 24
Conclusion -- Recommendations