IFEX
Reporters Without Borders
(RSF/IFEX) - Reporters Without Borders is very worried to learn that an
arrest warrant was issued in Kabul on 30 January for Partaw Naderi, a
well-known poet, writer and contributor to Afghan news media, in
connection with a libel action by transport minister Davood Ali Najafi.
"We call for the arrest warrant's immediate withdrawal," Reporters
Without Borders said. "According to the media law, the attorney
general's office cannot initiate proceedings until requested by the
commission for the verification of press offences. As the commission has
not met and has not issued any request, the decision by the attorney
general's office to issue a warrant is illegal."
The origins of the case go back to August 2011, when several Afghan media including Tolo TV and the newspaper Mandegar
published a letter by two transport ministry officials accusing Najafi
of involvement in corruption within the ministry and involvement in
electoral fraud in 2009, when he was a member of the independent
electoral commission.
The letter quoted Najafi as saying "It was me who had Karzai elected
president," implicitly recognizing that there was massive fraud.
Naderi quoted from this letter in a May 2012 article for the
newspaper Araman Mili, describing the minister's comments as an insult
to the democratic process and popular sovereignty.
Although granted the right to reply in the same newspaper, Najafi
filed a lawsuit against Naderi over his article and, on 3 February,
attorney general's office spokesman Bassair Azizi confirmed on Radio
Azadi that a warrant had been issued for Naderi's arrest.
Reached by Reporters Without Borders, Naderi said: "I wrote my
article on the basis of information that had been published several
months earlier in the country's news media."
The information ministry said the attorney general's official
notified the verification commission of the complaint, and then of the
arrest warrant. But information ministry public relations adviser
Zaryalai Nawabi acknowledged that "the case was never discussed by the
commission and the commission did not issue its opinion."
"A week after Afghanistan's marked rise in the 2013 Reporters
Without Borders press freedom index (up 22 places to 128th), above all
because there are no longer any journalists in prison, the authorities
must ensure that the media law is respected," Reporters Without Borders
said.