Afghanistan may ease ban on news coverage of attacks
KABUL (Reuters) - Afghanistan promised on Tuesday to clarify new restrictions on news coverage of Taliban strikes, and hinted that it may row back from the most draconian measures, which had amounted to a total ban on filming during attacks.
The United States said it planned to raise the issue with Kabul, a day after the Afghan National Directorate of Security (NDS) spy agency summoned journalists to its headquarters and threatened to arrest anyone filming while strikes are under way.
President Hamid Karzai's spokesman, Waheed Omer, on Tuesday said that the new guidelines had not yet been drawn up, and promised they would not amount to "censorship."
"I would not call it restrictions. There is nothing even discussed or conveyed to the media called restrictions on the media," he said.
The goal would be to prevent insurgents from using live media reports to get tactical information, and to keep journalists themselves out of danger at the scene of violence, he said, without elaborating on how those goals might be achieved.
"Live broadcast of the scene of the attacks has in the past been useful to the enemy to give instructions to their people who are on the scene. Through a mechanism, we want to ensure that does not happen again. We are also blamed for not protecting the lives of the journalists," Omer said.
http://in.reuters.com/article/southAsiaNews/idINIndia-46597920100302