Taliban Issues 11 New Rules For Afghan Media
NDTV
Over 150 media outlets in Afghanistan have shut down their operations as they struggled to carry out their day to day functions, according to a report.
These curbs include directives against publishing topics that are in conflict with Islam or insulting to national personalities, and also instruct journalists to produce news reports in coordination with the government media office, The New York Times reported.
"Journalists are just frightened," said Steven Butler, a senior member of America-based press freedom organization adding that "the organization had been receiving hundreds of emails from [Afghan] journalists asking for help."
Since the collapse of Afghan government, Over 150 media outlets in Afghanistan have shut down their operations as they struggled to carry out their day to day functions. This is because the Taliban has been continuously creating intrusion in media's 'right to information' which has hampered the work of scribe organisations, Tolo News reported.
Some of the most prominent newspapers were also forced to cease print operations and now publish only online, amid the country's sharp economic downturn, The New York Times reported