Moby Media executive urges global support for Afghan press

Moby Media

Moby Media

Mujahid Kakar, head of news and current affairs for Afghanistan’s Moby Media Group, was at the United Nations on Monday to give a speech on World Press Freedom Day. He stopped by CPJ’s office afterward, and we talked for more than an hour about journalism in Afghanistan. Kakar, left, whose oversight includes the influential Tolo TV, made a string of important points concerning lapses in professionalism, the importance of international support, and the challenges that front-line journalists face from all sides. I’ll bullet-point some of them, and then quote Kakar about what he felt was the most important part of his message:

Facing obstacles from all sides, what do Afghan journalists need most? In our conversation, Kakar repeated what he said was the core of his message at the United Nations: 

Quite honestly, what Afghan journalists need right now is moral support, because we know that we can survive if we have international moral support. Since the fall of the Taliban, media have been growing rapidly in Afghanistan. There are a lot of people who believe that they have a role in providing information, organizing civil society to prevent human rights abuses, women’s rights abuse. Moral support is very essential.


But what I feel we are witnessing in recent times, especially after Obama took office, is that his government has failed to address the support for the promotion of democracy. If you study the Obama strategy, there is no single point about the promotion of the human rights, promotion of the democracy, of media. A lot of Afghans think that the U.S. has taken a few steps back. There is no strong support for media, for democracy. The Bush administration was very clear on the issue of promotion of civil society, human rights, education, the media. But when Secretary of State Hillary Clinton announced that the fight was only against America’s enemies and not to promote democracy in Afghanistan, that was quite a disappointment for the Afghan press. That’s the message people feel they are getting from America.


Afghan journalists know that if we don’t have the strong support of international community we can’t survive. Because on one hand there are drug lords, the crooked elements of the government, and the Taliban—they’ll all use tools to pressure the free media so that it can’t survive. Our main pillar of support for free media is the support of the international community, the strong voice of the international community. 

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