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Today's Paper | November 24, 2024

Updated 31 Mar, 2014 08:17pm

Election coverage shows growth of new Afghan media

KABUL: In a crowded room overlooking a gleaming television studio, Tolo TV’s election team is strategising for Afghanistan’s presidential debate when the room suddenly goes dark. The staff doesn’t miss a beat.

The 13 men and three women just keep on talking about soundboards, cameras and the taking of questions via Twitter until the station’s generator kicks in and the overhead lights flicker back on.“It’s just technical difficulties,” explains Mujahid Kakar, the Tolo anchor and moderator of the upcoming debate among six of the main contenders vying to succeed President Hamid Karzai in the April 5 election.

The moment is a reminder of the difficulties of reporting in an impoverished country torn by war. Yet, in many ways, Afghan media coverage of the crucial campaign that kicked off this week resembles what you would see in any other modern democracy, with newspaper candidate profiles and political talk shows on numerous TV and radio stations.

And this week, for the first time, major contenders for the presidency will introduce themselves to the nation in a televised debate.

The proliferation of Afghan media in the past 12 years is one of the most visible bright spots of the fraught project to foster a stable democracy, even as the Nato military mission in Afghanistan nears its end with the country still riven by war with Taliban insurgents and mired in corruption and poverty.

Given that the Taliban banned television as sinful and allowed only one religious radio station before they were driven from power in 2001, the sheer number of media outlets — dozens of TV channels, more than 100 radio stations and hundreds of newspapers — is stunning. That they are mostly free to set their own agenda is even more so.

“It goes against some of that common wisdom that it’s all doomed,” says Nader Nadery, chairman of the Free and Fair Election Foundation, an Afghan pro-democracy group.

Where the Taliban banned sports, Afghans can now watch soccer matches on television. Where music aside from religious hymns was forbidden, there are American Idol-style singing competitions. Women were once erased from public life; now some host television shows.

What’s less clear is what the future holds for all these media outlets after this year, when most foreign troops will go home and much of the billions in aid dollars is expected to be reduced.Tolo TV is touting the debate as the first in the country to pit all the major presidential candidates against one another. State television hosted a debate between Karzai and two challengers during the last election, in 2009, but it excluded Karzai’s main challenger Abdullah Abdullah, who is running again this year.

“It’s a historic debate for the country and for the people,” says Kakar, 42, a former refugee who studied journalism in Pakistan and returned home after the US-led military intervention. “This is a process of democracy. We prove to the people that these candidates, they have the responsibility toward the people.” With Afghanistan’s low literacy levels, radio and television dominate the media landscape, with 63 per cent of all Afghans listening to radio regularly and 48 per cent watching television.

Tolo TV is by far the most popular channel, with an estimated 10 million viewers tuning in to its mixture of news, sports and light entertainment.

Other television outlets included Ariana and YakTV, which air a mixture of cooking shows, games and Afghan cultural fare. The government is still a major player, with a state television station and more than 30 government-linked radio stations.

While most of Afghanistan’s television fare is tame by Western standards — female reporters wear headscarves, and imported Turkish soap operas are pixelated to mask any show of skin by women — the flourishing entertainment and news have drawn the ire of many religious conservatives. Sadaf Amiri, 23, anchor of a political talk show on Tolo, knows that first-hand from the threats and the cold shoulders from some of the more conservative politicians she has interviewed.

“For a woman, working in the media is a threat in itself, whether someone threatens us personally or not,” Amiri says. “But I have been threatened.”

Whether the relatively free press will remain in Afghanistan is not certain. Even if the election goes smoothly, Afghanistan’s religious conservatives still wield tremendous power, and there is no guarantee that future governments will be able to resist pressure to curtail the press.

A greater threat might be financial. Many of the newly minted stations and newspapers are dependent on foreign funding, and the few profitable private outlets, like Tolo, get much of their advertising revenue from businesses that rely on the coalition.

Still, Nadery argues that this year’s unprecedented level of campaign coverage illustrates that Afghanistan has changed in fundamental ways in the past 12 years.

Taking a more optimistic view than many, he says Afghans have become accustomed to the new, relatively freewheeling media and won’t give it up easily. The same may also go for elections.

“Societal transformation here is a direct result of the free media,” Nadery says. “The media also changed the way politics have been done in this country.”

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