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Afghan Journalist Killed, 5th in 2 Months

Afghan Journalist Killed, 5th in 2 Months A journalist in Ghazni, Rahmatullah Nikzad, who was also head of the journalists union in the province, was killed in an attack by armed men this evening, the provincial police said.  Ghazni police said that the journalist was killed by unknown armed men in front of his home.   He had worked for Al Jazeera and the Associated Press.  He is the fifth journalist killed in the last two months in the country.   Amid an increase of threats against media workers in Afghanistan, journalists on Saturday called on the government to launch an investigation into recent attacks that killed several journalists in the country. 

Afghan journalist Rahmatullah Nekzad killed near his home

Afghan journalist Rahmatullah Nekzad killed near his home dw.com 12/21/2020 dw.com Rahmatullah Nekzad was shot dead by unknown assailants using a silenced pistol while walking to a nearby mosque. Nekzad had been head of the local Journalist s Union. © Rahmat Gul/AP Photo/picture alliance Nekzad was a prominent journalist in Afghanistan s volatile Ghazni province The killing of prominent Afghan journalist Rahmatullah Nekzad draw strong condemnation in Afghanistan, with the country s president Ashraf Ghani calling it a terrorist attack. The reporter was killed while walking from his home to a nearby mosque on Monday. The shooters used a pistol equipped with a silencer to gun down Nekzad, a police spokesman told the AFP news agency.

In Afghanistan, the freedoms of the press are under attack

In Afghanistan, the freedoms of the press are under attack Even as Joe Biden was announced as president-elect, many Afghans wondered how a new administration thousands of miles away would affect the course of their own nation and its long-running conflict. After eighteen months of negotiations, the Afghan Taliban and the US government signed an agreement last February in Doha, Qatar, which paved the way for a US withdrawal from Afghanistan. Afghans and non-Afghans alike saw the deal as a step toward peace in the war-torn country.  But though the US military ceased most of its operations, the intra-Afghan conflict they entered, escalated, and in many instances precipitated continues unabated. Afghans did most of the fighting and dying prior to the Doha deal; they now do all of it, save for the emergency US air strikes called in to stiffen the resistance of the Afghan national security forces against their ever emboldened Talib enemy.

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