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Taliban-run media stop showing images of living beings in some Afghan provinces

TV anchor Nesar Nabil is seen on studio monitors wearing a face mask.
TV anchor Nesar Nabil, seen on studio monitors wearing a face mask in protest of the Taliban’s order that female presenters cover their faces, reads the news in Kabul, Afghanistan, in 2022.
(Ebrahim Noroozi / Associated Press)
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Taliban-run media have stopped showing images of living beings in some Afghan provinces to comply with morality laws, an official confirmed Tuesday.

In August, the country’s Vice and Virtue Ministry published laws regulating aspects of everyday life, including public transportation, shaving, the media and celebrations reflecting authorities’ interpretation of Islamic law, or Sharia.

Article 17 bans the publication of images of living beings, sparking concerns about the consequences for Afghan media and press freedom.

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A spokesman for the Vice and Virtue Ministry, Saif ul Islam Khyber, said government media in the provinces of Takhar, Maidan Wardak and Kandahar have been advised not to air or show images of anything with a soul — meaning people and animals.

Khyber told the Associated Press a day earlier that the ministry was responsible for implementing the morality laws.

The Taliban says it’s mandatory for Afghan women to conceal their voices and bare faces in public.

Aug. 22, 2024

He did not clarify if the rules affected all media, including foreign outlets, or only Afghan channels and websites.

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Nor did he say how the laws would be enforced or if there was a deadline for compliance.

Hujjatullah Mujadidi, the director of the Afghan Independent Journalists Union, said that Vice and Virtue Ministry officials initially told state media to stop running pictures and videos of living beings. This request was later extended to all media in those provinces.

“Last night, independent local media [in some provinces] also stopped running these videos and images and are instead broadcasting nature videos,” Mujadidi said.

No other Muslim-majority country imposes similar restrictions, including Iran and Saudi Arabia. During their previous rule in the late 1990s, the Taliban banned most television, radio and newspapers altogether.

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