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NAI: Access to information law main problem of journalism in Afghanistan

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The Afghanistan Media Support Organization, NAI says that not implementing the access to information law is one of the major problems of journalism in Afghanistan.

NAI noted that Afghan residents need security information for their impunity but as the National Unity Government (NUG) formed restriction have been established against journalism.

“The main problem is the lack of information and one of the main factors of violence against journalist is also the lack of information,” Mujib Khelwatgar, CEO of NAI said.

For the first time in Afghan history, citizens and journalists get access to information through state institutions, after president Ghani has signed the new Access to Information Law on December 2014.

The law approved in 6 chapters and 32 articles that deliver Afghans unprecedented transparency in the state institutions.

“People need information because impunity of people needs security information,” Khelwatgar added.

The law lives up to international standards and will have major effects in limiting corruption, localizing democracy and strengthening the people’s political and social participation in state building.

People will gain access to state and public budgets, and official spokespeople will be inclined to share information with journalists and citizens.

Previously, statistics indicated that violence against journalists in Afghanistan was increased by NUG officials compared to the former government.

Historically, the government of Afghanistan has been marked by a lack of transparency, with only a vague – and thus far unenforced – reference in its decade-old constitution to the guaranteed right to access to information.

The access to information law covers non-governmental organizations and the private sector.

 

 

 

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Khalilzad: Another US citizen to be released from Afghan custody soon

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Zalmay Khalilzad, the former U.S. Special Representative for Afghanistan, has announced the release of another American citizen in the country.

Khalilzad said in a post on his X account that, according to information from the Islamic Emirate’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Faye Dai Hall, an American citizen who has been in custody in Afghanistan, will be released soon.

Earlier, George Glezmann, an American citizen whom the Islamic Emirate had held for over two years, was also released.

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About $80 billion worth of US military equipment abandoned in Afghanistan: Vance

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US Vice President JD Vance said on Friday that Joe Biden administration left about $80 billion worth of military equipment in Afghanistan, which was a “catastrophic error.”

Vance made the remarks during a visit to a military base in Greenland.

He also said the Biden administration’s “catastrophic error” led to the deaths of 13 US soldiers in an attack during the evacuation at Kabul airport in August 2021.

Earlier, US President Donald Trump also criticized the abandonment of military equipment in Afghanistan and called for its return.

The Islamic Emirate, however, has said that the weapons left by the US in Afghanistan belong to the Afghans and will not be returned.

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IEA frees over 2,400 prisoners on the occasion of Eid

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The Supreme Court announced on Saturday that based on the ruling of the supreme leader of the Islamic Emirate, 2,463 prisoners have been pardoned and released on the occasion of Eid al-Fitr.

The court said in a statement that the prison terms of another 3,152 prisoners have been reduced.

Eid in Afghanistan will be celebrated on Sunday or Monday, depending on the moon sighting.

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