NEWS
FROM THE COMMITTEE TO PROTECT JOURNALISTS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
AFGHANISTAN: Imprisoned journalists
released New York, June 25, 2003-The Committee to Protect Journalists
(CPJ) welcomes the release of two journalists from prison today in
Afghanistan. However, CPJ remains deeply concerned about government
threats to prosecute the journalists for blasphemy in connection with
articles published that were critical of Islam. Sayeed Mirhassan
Mahdawi, the editor of the weekly newspaper Aftab, which is based in the
capital, Kabul, and his deputy editor Ali Payam Sistany were arrested on
June 17 after publishing an article entitled "Holy Fascism," which was
deemed "an offense to Islam" by Afghanistan's Supreme Court. The court
ordered the arrests of the two journalists, and banned the newspaper
from further publication. [Click here for more information:
www.cpj.org/protests/03ltrs/Afghan19june03pl.html.] Afghan president
Hamid Karzai said in an interview today with the BBC's Persian Service
that he had personally ordered the release of the two journalists
pending their trial. Karzai defended the charges, saying, "freedom of
expression must not violate the religious beliefs of the Afghan people
and the national interests of the Afghan people." He said that he had
ordered an investigation into the article, and that the detention of the
journalists was a necessary part of that investigation. "While the
release of Mahdawi and Sistany from prison is a positive development,"
said CPJ executive director Ann Cooper, "until the charges against them
are dropped and new laws protecting the rights of journalists to do
their jobs without fear of reprisal are established, Afghanistan will
continue to be a hazardous place for the media." The chairman of
Afghanistan's Supreme Court, Mowlawi Fazl Hadi Shinwari, told the Afghan
Islamic Press news agency yesterday that a trial against the journalists
would take place in accordance with Islamic law, or sharia, and that the
case against them would be presented in a lower court in Kabul in the
near future. CPJ is a New York-based, independent, nonprofit
organization that works to safeguard press freedom worldwide.
For more information about press
conditions in Afghanistan, visit www.cpj.org. == Committee to Protect
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