San Francisco unmasked. In the cross-hairs at the de Young Fine Arts Museum

Every Picture Tells a Story – Masks Required edition

Liz and Lee Heidhues 8.26.2021  

This is your Blogger at the de Young Museum before viewing the Judy Chicago exhibit on Members Only Day. Standing with a daughter and her boyfriend. I had just pulled down my Mask to give the full frontal view to the photographer.

In the next shot I struggle to pull my Mask over my chin as the daughter rolls her eyes and the boyfriend rivets himself to the unfolding drama on the left. A museum Minder, who had been setting up for a presentation, screeches her trolley cart to a halt and rushes over. She busts me with a stern admonishment. 

I don my Mask quickly. With the mask now fully in place, the witnesses to my transgression put on their faces the Alfred E. Neuman expression: “What, me worry?”

Alfred E. Neuman 8.29.2021.jpg
Alfred E. Neuman

The de Young Minder had targeted me in her cross-hairs and rung me up for being un-Masked 10 seconds in the indoor venue.

dad-busted-ii.jpg

Dad busted III.jpg

Dad busted IV.jpg

Top artwork – Judy Chicago – Wolves in the cross-hairs

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judy_Chicago

Masks and Vaccines continue to be controversial no matter where and in which venue. Even cartoonist Gary Trudeau finds the Controversy worthy of Lampoon.

Doonesbury 8.29.2021

 

Doonesbury I 8.29.2021

 

Germany: anti-vaxxers defy Court ban. March in Berlin against COVID rules

The refusal of people to comply with government mandates to mitigate the spread of the Covid-19 is a world wide case of People Behaving Badly.

Such absurd and dangerous personal behavior is not limited to the luddites in America who continue to oppose the common sense advice of health officials and government agencies.

The resistance to good health practices is widespread in Europe as the rallies in defiance of Court orders in Berlin clearly prove.

German anti-vaxxers V  8.28.2021.jpg
Anti-vaxxers march in streets of Berlin. Protestor wearing banner, “We are the People.”

Deutsche Welle 8.28.2021

Marchers rallied through the streets of Berlin, with thousands of police officers on standby in case of violence. A court had allowed only one rally to go ahead.

A total of 4,200 police officers were on standby, including officers from Baden-Württemberg, Lower Saxony, Bavaria and Saxony who were deployed to the city to support their Berlin colleagues.

Last year, around 10,000 protesters against coronavirus restrictions took to the streets on August 29. The marches, which included far-right elementstried to break into the Reichstag building that houses the German parliament after overpowering guards at its entrance.

German Covid deniers I 7.31.2021.jpg
Anti-vaxxers harangue German cops

This year, the authorities were taking no chances, keeping the Querdenker and anti-vaxxer groups well away from the government area of Mitte.

Thousands of demonstrators gathered in Berlin on Saturday to protest the German government’s coronavirus policies. 

Riot police walked alongside protesters, most of whom were unmasked, as helicopters watched from the air.

Large but scattered crowds of protesters across Berlin waved German flags and anti-lockdown slogans of the Querdenker group — a movement which includes coronavirus skeptics, far-right activists and anti-vaxxers. Berlin authorities banned nine planned demonstrations, including a rally by the Querdenker group.

German anti-vaxxers III  8.28.2021.jpg
Anti-vaxxers display (Chancellor Angela) Merkel Must Go banner

However, one of the demonstrations successfully challenged the police ban in court and gained permission for a gathering of an expected 500 people on Saturday and Sunday.

“Experience has shown that a large number of people do come to the city and do not follow the ban,” said a police spokesperson before the demonstrations.

“The police will enforce the assembly bans, be present accordingly and protect the government quarter in particular,” the spokesperson added.

German face mask vending machine 5.1.,2020.jpg
Mask vending machine in Germany

https://www.dw.com/en/germany-thousands-march-in-berlin-against-covid-rules/a-59012238

Parole Board Urges Release of Sirhan Sirhan, Robert F. Kennedy’s Assassin

Lee Heidhues 8.27.2021

Granting parole to Robert Kennedy’s assassin would be a tough pill to swallow.

Robert Kennedy’s murderer has spent most of his adult life incarcerated. He’s been imprisoned 53 years.

I was 21 and completely devastated when Robert Kennedy was assassinated in June 1968.

At a deep psychological level I never recovered from the shock and trauma of his murder. I had campaigned actively on Robert Kennedy’s behalf as a college student throughout Spring 1968 and knew he would be elected President in November 1968. My life’s path headed in a totally different direction in the aftermath of his assassination.

Robert Kennedy’s murder influenced my political perspective and personal life in ways I did not forsee or realize at the time.

RFK IV 8.27.2021.jpg

Robert Kennedy lay dying – June 5, 1968

Excerpted from The New York Times 8.27.2021

California parole commissioners recommended on Friday that Sirhan B. Sirhan should be freed on parole after spending more than 50 years in prison for assassinating Robert F. Kennedy during his campaign for president.

Shortly after midnight on June 5, 1968, Kennedy gave a speech at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles following his victory in the Democratic primary in California. As Kennedy, a senator from New York, walked through the hotel’s pantry, Mr. Sirhan shot him with a revolver. Five other people around Kennedy were shot as well, but they all survived.

Kennedy died the next day, less than five years after President John F. Kennedy, one of his brothers, had been assassinated.

rfk-v-8.27.2021.jpg
Robert Kennedy campaigning in California – 1968

The recommendation from the two commissioners does not necessarily mean Mr. Sirhan, 77, will walk free, but it most likely puts his fate in the hands of Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat facing a recall election that will determine his political future. A spokeswoman for Mr. Newsom declined to say whether he would approve the recommendation, only that he would consider the case after it is reviewed by the parole board’s lawyers.

rfk-ii-8.27.2021.jpg
Time – May 1968
rfk-iii-8.27.2021.jpg
Time – RFK Assassination issue

The parole hearing was the 16th time Mr. Sirhan had faced parole board commissioners, but it was the first time no prosecutor showed up to argue for his continued imprisonment. George Gascón, the progressive and divisive Los Angeles County district attorney who was elected last year, has made it a policy for prosecutors not to attend parole hearings, saying the parole board has all the facts it needs to make an informed decision.

At the hearing, which was conducted virtually because of the coronavirus pandemic, Mr. Sirhan said he had little memory of the assassination itself, but he said he “must have” brought the gun to the scene.

“I take responsibility for taking it in and I take responsibility for firing the shots,” he said. Mr. Sirhan, much of his short hair turned white, was seated in front of a computer and was wearing a blue uniform with a paper towel in his chest pocket.

Mr. Sirhan, who is Palestinian and was born in Jerusalem, said in a television interview from prison in 1989 that he had killed Kennedy because he felt betrayed by the senator’s proposal during the campaign to send 50 military planes to Israel.

Top photo – Robert Kennedy speaks to cheering crowd after winning California primary June 4, 1968 at Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles. He was asssassinated a few minutes later.

Moronic Missoula luddite self-serving selfish moms and dads put kids at risk

Here is today’s example of People Behaving Badly – Missoula Montana edition.

Either these so called adults don’t read the news or are totally oblivious to the Pandemic, now nearly two years running, which continues to leave its imprint on planet Earth.

Sadly, it’s the children who will ultimately suffer for the parents selfishness and stupidity.

Excerpted from The Missoulian 8.26.2021

Local parents are suing Missoula County Public Schools, Target Range and Hellgate Elementary over masking requirements to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

 

The 11 parents are also suing on “behalf of their minor children,” most of whom are enrolled at the three districts. One family involved in the suit claims to have unenrolled their children at Target Range School District due to the district’s mask mandate.

 

Those involved with the suit claim that the required use of masks at the three districts is against the law, and infringe on a person’s “right to privacy, dignity, and free expression without the necessary showing of a compelling government interest in doing so.”

The general allegations against the school district call into question scientific evidence by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization regarding the effectiveness of masks.

The suit also alleges that the mask mandates at the three districts do not accommodate the needs of children with autism or asthma.

Missoula anti-vaxx III 8.26.2021.jpg
Montanans protest in front of former Governor Steve Bullock’s house – July 2020

“Wearing a mask constitutes to many an outward sign of trust in, loyalty to, or submission to the honesty, wisdom, and power of the government,” the plaintiffs claim in the suit.

The plaintiffs are represented by local lawyer Quentin Rhoades of Rhoades Siefert & Erickson.

The parents in the suit are joined by Stand Up Montana, a nonprofit organization based in Gallatin County. The group seeks to provide support for legal action against school districts across the state that are “illegally masking our children,” according to its website.

missoula-anti-vaxx-ii-8.26.2021.jpg

 

Court documents filed with the suit claim there are “many” Missoula County residents enrolled as members with Stand Up Montana, which says it now has over 2,500 members from around the state.

 

Stand Up Montana says it’s preparing to file a similar lawsuit in Gallatin County against Bozeman Public Schools after its board voted in favor of universal masking.

 

https://missoulian.com/news/local/parents-sue-3-missoula-public-school-districts-over-mask-mandates/article_ca6295b8-577e-5072-9f80-0b8d5c57a993.html#tncms-source=login

USPS honors anarchist novelist. “Greatest American writer of her generation.”

Some famous people spend their entire lives under the radar even though their work has impacted a large segment of society.  Such is the case of  Ursula K. Le Guin, the acclaimed author who died nearly four years ago.  Now she is getting some late recognition. It is coming from the United States Postal Service which undoubtedly transported much of her work through the mail to libraries, universities, book stores and individual readers.

Peoples World 8.19.2021

The U.S. Postal Service (USPS) has honored the cross-genre writings of Ursula K. Le Guin, the acclaimed science fiction and fantasy author, with the 33rd stamp in its literary series. The stamp was released on July 27 in Portland, Ore., the author’s longtime home, where she died on Jan. 22, 2018. The stamp is a “Forever” issue selling for $.95, designed for use on 3-ounce mail. It will retain its value even if USPS rates for this weight increase.

Ursula Le Guin I 8.25.2021

A political nonconformist, she probably would most accurately be described as an anarchist. Author Michael Chabon referred to her as the “greatest American writer of her generation.”

In 2009, she resigned from the Authors Guild after it endorsed Google’s book digitization project, claiming that the Guild had abandoned “the whole concept of copyright” and had given it up “to a corporation, on their terms, without a struggle.” Speaking in 2014 at the National Book Awards, she criticized Amazon’s oligarchic control over the publishing industry. Le Guin was a longtime member and advocate for the National Writers Union.

Le Guin authored a long catalog of award-winning speculative fiction works, including The Left Hand of Darkness and The Earthsea Cycle. The stamp features an illustration of Le Guin based on a 2006 portrait. The background of the stamp is a scene from Left Hand of Darkness, published in 1969. It was designed by Donato Giancola.

In conjunction with the new stamp release, USPS Chief Financial Officer and Executive Vice President Joseph Corbett was quoted saying, “Ursula once said she wanted to see science fiction step over the old walls of convention and hit right into the next wall—and start to break it down, too. She felt the ideas represented in her fiction could help people become more aware of other ways to do things, other ways to be and to help people wake up.”

Le Guin’s writings have been translated into numerous languages throughout the world, and in 1997 she herself published a translation of the Tao Te Ching, motivated by her sympathy for Taoist thought.

Ursula Kroeber was born on Oct. 21, 1929, in Berkeley, Calif., to author Theodora Kroeber (1897-1979) and UC Berkeley anthropologist Alfred Louis Kroeber (1876-1960). In 1961 Theodora Kroeber published the highly influential book Ishi in Two Worlds, an account of Ishi, the last survivor of the Yahi people of Northern California after the rest of its members had been killed by white colonizers. Alfred Kroeber had befriended and studied Ishi between 1911 and 1916 when Ishi died.

Le Guin was educated at Radcliffe College, and later received a master’s degree from Columbia University. She began exploring the potential of science fiction and fantasy through writing in the early 1960s, publishing her seminal first novel, Rocannon’s World, in 1966.

Ursula Le Guin IV 8.25.2021.jpg

Her literary career extended over a span of nearly 60 years and included over 20 novels and over 100 short stories, as well as poetry, criticism, translations, and children’s books. Thematically, she explored gender identity, androgyny, sexuality, feminism, race, coming of age, and alternative political structures, such as in the 1974 utopian novel The Dispossessed.

A writer of high principles, in 1977 Le Guin refused a Nebula Award for the story “The Diary of the Rose” to protest the Science Fiction Writers of America’s revocation of the Polish science fiction writer Stanisław Lem’s honorary membership. She attributed the revocation to Lem’s criticism of American science fiction and willingness to live in the Eastern Bloc, saying she felt reluctant to receive an award “for a story about political intolerance from a group that had just displayed political intolerance.” The organization tried to explain that his honorary membership had been revoked only after he had begun to be published in the United States and was thereby eligible for paid membership.

Ursula Le Guin III 8.25.2021.jpg

https://www.peoplesworld.org/article/new-u-s-stamp-honors-principled-sci-fi-and-fantasy-writer-ursula-le-guin/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ursula_K._Le_Guin

 

 

David Gilbert “He has served 40 years.. He was the driver, not the murderer”

40 Years is a long time for someone whose involvement was being at the scene of a Murder.

Ex-cop Dan White received a 5 year sentence for MURDERING IN COLD BLOOD San Francisco Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk in November 1978.

Dan White 11.27.1978.jpg

Excerpted from New York Times 8.23.2021

David Gilbert, who was serving a 75-year sentence for felony murder in the notorious Rockland County crime, will now be eligible for parole.

In the waning hours of his final day in office, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo commuted the prison sentence of one of the members of the gang behind the infamous robbery of a Brink’s armored car in 1981 that left two police officers and a guard dead, a politically motivated ambush that continues to reverberate 40 years later.

David Gilbert is serving a 75-years-to-life sentence for his role in the crime as a member of the Weather Underground, which stole $1.6 million in cash from the armored car outside the Nanuet Mall near Nyack, N.Y.

David Gilbert II 8.23.2021
David Gilbert booking photo – October 21, 1981

The decision does not mean he will automatically be released from prison. Mr. Gilbert will be granted a parole hearing in the weeks to come, according to Monday’s announcement.

Mr. Gilbert is the second member of the group to seek relief from Mr. Cuomo. In 2016, the governor commuted the 75-year sentence of Judith Clark, praising her “exceptional strides in self-development” as an inmate. Mr. Cuomo’s actions also granted her a parole hearing, and she was eventually released.

Mr. Cuomo cited Mr. Gilbert’s work in AIDS education and prevention while in prison, and as a teacher and law library clerk.

“He has served 40 years of a 75-year sentence, related to an incident in which he was the driver, not the murderer,” Mr. Cuomo wrote on Twitter on Monday evening.

Mr. Gilbert’s upcoming parole hearing follows a campaign for his release that included his son, Chesa Boudin, who was an infant when his mother, Kathy Boudin, and Mr. Gilbert were convicted in the attack, and who in 2019 was elected the district attorney of San Francisco. Ms. Boudin was released in 2003 after receiving a 20-year sentence as part of a plea deal, and went on to become a professor at Columbia University.

David Gilbert I 8.23.2021.jpg

“I am overcome with emotion,” Mr. Boudin said in a statement on Monday night. “My heart is bursting, and it also aches for the families of the three victims. Although he never used a gun or intended for anyone to get hurt, my father’s crime caused unspeakable harm and devastated the lives of many separate families. I will continue to keep those families in my heart; I know they can never get their loved ones back.”

Killed in the robbery were Sgt. Edward O’Grady, Officer Waverly Brown and Peter Paige, a Brink’s guard. The commutation of Mr. Gilbert’s sentence, like Ms. Clark’s before him, outraged the law enforcement community in Rockland County.

“It’s absurd,” Arthur Keenan Jr., a retired detective with the Nyack Police Department, who was wounded in the shootout, said on Monday. He said Mr. Cuomo “is stabbing all of law enforcement in the back, and when I say all, I’m talking about federal, state, local — all across the whole country — because he’s a traitor.”

Jack Hirschman dies at 87. Marxist poet, Communist, Cafe Trieste fixture

San Francisco has lost an original. I used to see Jack Hirschman frequently at Cafe Trieste where I spent time sipping a cappuccino while reading a book or writing in my journal. Jack  an integral piece of the North Beach ambience, was known by every local. His passing is a sad day for San Francisco. His memory will live on.

Excerpted from San Francisco Chronicle 8.22.2021

Jack Hirschman, a scholar and translator in nine languages who threw over a career as a college professor for the life of a proletarian North Beach poet, died Sunday at his home on Union Street in San Francisco.

A former San Francisco poet laureate, Hirschman enjoyed a publishing career that lasted more than 50 years and more than 100 volumes, though half of them were translations.

“The most important thing as a poet is that I worked for the Communist movement for 45 years, and the new class of impoverished and homeless people,” he said in a 2018 interview to inform this obituary, while laying on his double bed on the fourth floor of a walk-up, overlooking Columbus Avenue.

Jack Hirschman VII  8.22.2021.jpg
Mishana Hosseinioun with Jack Hirischman. A  Clarendon Scholar at the University of Oxford. She is a Drafter with the International Convention on Human Rights Research Project within the Institute for Global Challenges and the Law at the University of California, Berkeley School of Law.

With his push-broom mustache, weathered face, wild hair and outlandish hat, Hirschman was what you looked for in a bohemian, and he lived the part in a single room in the old hotel above Caffe Trieste. Even after marriage upgraded him to a cottage behind an apartment house, Hirschman still came to write every day in his room.

Anyone after a more lighthearted experience should look elsewhere

The Defeated is a gripping  and disturbing drama. At times it is difficult to watch as the storyline is violent, enthralling and absorbing. The acting performances and cinematic recreation (actually filmed in Prague) of postwar World War II Berlin in 1946 are excellent.

At certain moments it makes me think of the classic 1992 film by Lars van Trier, Zentropa.

Excerpted from Ready Steady Cut 8.18.2021

Nazis are the quintessential villains of all popular culture, and indeed of history.

Anyone after a more lighthearted experience will be better looking elsewhere since The Defeated isn’t interested in giving you an easy ride, but it does provide a relatively unique and welcome slant on the Second World War – and it’s a gripping thriller for as long as it lasts.

What’s unusual about The Defeated, a new eight-part German-Canadian collaboration now streaming on Netflix is that it frames its setting of a bombed-out post-war Berlin within a specifically German perspective, despite its classically handsome American protagonist.

There’s a pulpiness to all this that stands in stark contrast to the pitch-dark themes and a convincing simulacrum of a decimated Berlin that has been brought to life with impressive production design.

It isn’t trying to engender any sympathy for the Nazis, you understand, but to point out, often very effectively, that there was an entire country full of people who were forced to live under their rule and exist in their wake. 

Defeated III 8.21.2021
The Russians have role to play in The Defeated as one of Berlin’s post war occupiers

One such person is Elsie (Nina Hoss), a former schoolteacher turned head of a fledgling police force that Brooklyn detective Max McLaughlin (Taylor Kitsch) is sent to whip into shape. It’s the smallest department in the American Occupied Zone, staffed mainly by teenagers and entirely by civilians, but it’s caught in the middle of rivalrous factions that include the Allied occupiers, a serial killer, a crime boss, former Nazis, and those just trying to make do without antagonizing any or all of the above.

Everyone is looting to survive, many are killing for pleasure, and American GIs are raping the local women with enough frequency that a local crime boss, the enigmatic Engelmacher, or “Angel Maker”, is using the promise of backstreet abortions as a recruitment tool.

If this were all Max and Elsie had to worry about it’d be quite enough, but they’re also besieged on all sides by the nebulous motivations of Max’s superior, Tom Franklin (Michael C. Hall), and his flirty, often drunk wife Claire (Tuppence Middleton), and the exploits of Max’s missing GI brother Moritz (Logan Marshall-Green), who went AWOL after being among the American division who discovered the first German death camp at Dachau.

It’s part earnest historical drama and part pulpy mystery; that it does both things really rather well is a bit of a welcome surprise, especially since it manages to do them at the same time. 

https://readysteadycut.com/2021/08/18/the-defeated-review-netflix/

defeated-ii-8.21.2021.jpg

Excerpted from The Prague Reporter 8.21.2021

The Defeated was shot entirely in the Czech Republic, under the title Shadowplay, for about four months from April to September of 2019 at a budget of about 750 million crowns ($35 million).

A largely-abandoned former sugar factory was used to recreate the dusty streets of bombed-out Berlin. Prague’s Invalidovna complex was converted into a Jewish hospital in the German capital, where an action scene takes place.

In addition to production in Prague, The Defeated also filmed scenes in Doksy, Karlovy Vary, Kladno, Lenešice, Mladá Boleslav, Ploskovice, Slapy, and Ústí nad Labem.

https://www.praguereporter.com/home/2021/8/17/prague-shot-post-wwii-drama-the-defeated-premieres-on-netflix

Sour note. San Francisco Symphony Choral boss quits over vaccine “diktat”

The Swedish director of the San Francisco Symphony Choral is leaving town.

Ragnar Bohlin calls San Francisco’s mandated vaccine policy a “diktat”.

Definition of diktat
1 : a harsh settlement unilaterally imposed (as on a defeated nation)

Given the fact San Francisco has one of the highest rates of people taking the vaccine and one of the lowest rates of infection in the world Mr. Bohlin’s critique seems harsh. A more apt obseravation is that San Francisco is doing what needs to be done to mitigate the danger to its citizens during the Pandemic.

I hope Mr. Bohlin is happy in his new position as an organist back home in Sweden while awaiting for the clinical tests to be complete in 2022 or 2023.

Excerpted from The San Francisco Chronicle 8.20.2021

San Francisco Symphony Choral Director Ragnar Bohlin is resigning because of vaccine mandate policies instituted by both the company and the city of San Francisco, the Symphony announced Friday, Aug. 20. His term concludes at the end of the month, ending a 14-year tenure.

Bohlin has been outspoken about his anti-vaccination views on his Facebook page over the course of the pandemic; in the 24 hours before his exit was announced, he shared at least eight anti-vaccine posts.

Symphony spokesperson Robin Freeman confirmed that the reason for Bohlin’s departure was the vaccine mandate. In the Bay Area arts world, Bohlin’s is the first prominent resignation over vaccine mandates.

“I have with a growing sense of alarm observed the tide turn in this direction, in regards to medical passports,” Bohlin wrote to The Chronicle from Sweden, while on a night train to Stockholm. “I am sad to now see the SFS comply with these diktats and to deprive their employees their basic rights to privacy, bodily autonomy and informed consent.”

Ragnar Bohlin III 8.20.2021.jpg

“I deeply regret that I feel compelled to leave the SFS and my beloved Chorus because of this,” Bohlin said. He added that he has no plans to get a vaccine at least until clinical trials scheduled for 2022 and 2023 are complete.

On Aug. 3, the Symphony announced a vaccine mandate for audience members. On Aug. 12, San Francisco city officials introduced a mandate for indoor venues that seat more than 1,000 — which includes Davies Symphony Hall — applying the policy to anyone who enters, including workers and volunteers.

“He is a gifted and expressive musician and has led the San Francisco Symphony Chorus through countless artistic achievements and memorable performances,” Symphony Interim CEO Matthew Spivey said in a statement.

Indeed, Bohlin’s work with the Symphony on a recording of Mahler’s Symphony No. 8 won a 2010 Grammy for best choral performance.

Ragnar Bohlin I 8.20.2021.jpg

“He will be greatly missed, and we wish him well as he embarks on his next chapter,” Spivey added.

Bohlin said he has secured an organist position in Sweden and that he will be guest-conducting the Ericson Chamber Choir there in December. He hopes to return to San Francisco to work with his a cappella group, Cappella SF, in the future.

https://datebook.sfchronicle.com/music/san-francisco-symphony-choral-director-ragnar-bohlin-resigns-over-vaccine-mandate

Afghan Taliban terror. Fundamentalist violence targets women journalists

Journalists around the world are always at risk. The Taliban takeover in Afghanistan has placed women journalists in harms way. The Taliban with their prehistoric attitudes towards women can be expected to treat female journalists with terror and violence. A record which has already been made painfully obvious.

Excerpted from Deutsche Welle 8.17.2021

After the Taliban takeover, Afghan journalists should be permitted to leave the country as soon as possible. Women are in particular danger, according to Anne Renzenbrink from Reporters Without Borders.

The news from Afghanistan is devastating. Over the last few weeks, the Taliban have captured one province after another. Now, they have seized Kabul and are proclaiming “victory,” as TVs around the world show images of Islamist fighters in the presidential palace.

Afghanistan X 8.17.2021.jpg
Ariana News female anchor Mina Khairi, who was killed in a Kabul blast on June 3.

Five Afghan media workers have already been killed this year. More fatalities are likely to follow unless swift action is taken. Journalists’ lives are under threat.

The Taliban are also among the world’s biggest enemies of press freedom. In recent years, their numerous attacks on people working in the media have claimed several lives.

In 2017, for example, a cameraman and a colleague working for the Afghanistan National Assembly’s public broadcast channel were among those killed in twin bombings near the parliament building in Kabul. Two more colleagues from the station and a journalist from the weekly newspaper Kerad were injured.

Afghanistan VII  8.17.2021.jpg
Afghanistan. Dangerous assignment for women journalists

The so-called “Islamic State” (IS) has also carried out repeated terror attacks in Afghanistan. In 2018, the group specifically targeted journalists in a twin attack in Kabul, killing nine media workers.

Afghanistan already regularly ranks among the world’s five most dangerous countries for journalists in Reporters Without Borders annual report on violence against media representatives. It is to be feared that the situation will deteriorate dramatically with the Taliban takeover.

Anne Renzenbrink

Anne Renzenbrink is a press officer and Afghanistan expert at Reporters Without Borders

Women who work as journalists in Afghanistan are particularly at risk. On March 2 in the eastern city of Jalalabad three female journalists — Mursal Wahidi, Sadia Sadat and Shahnaz Raufi — were killed in a country where women are frequently the target of fundamentalist propaganda. (See top photo)

On December 10, 2020, two men opened fire on journalist Malala Maiwand’s car as she was traveling to work. Maiwand and her driver were both killed in the attack.

 

Afghanistan IX 8.17.2021.jpg
Trying to do journalist’s work is difficult in Afghanistan

The Taliban takeover does not merely pose a danger to people’s lives. It also threatens to cut off their information supply. More than 50 media outlets — mostly local radio and TV stations — have been forced to shut down in Taliban-controlled areas. Those still in operation are only broadcasting religious programming or other content dictated by the extremist group. Some 100 journalists have lost their jobs because they have been forced to flee areas occupied by the Taliban and seek protection in the country’s big cities.

https://www.dw.com/en/opinion-the-german-government-must-help-journalists-in-afghanistan/a-58887778