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More Than 100 Afghan Journalists Arrive At Mexico As They Flee From Taliban

A group of Afghans who worked for the New York Times were part of the group of journalists and their families to flee to Mexico

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Divya Dhadd
Divya Dhadd
Journalist

UNITED STATES: Mexico welcomed over 100 Afghan journalists and their families on Wednesday after requesting humanitarian protection, according to a statement from Mexico’s Foreign Ministry.

The group of 124 people whose lives were at stake in Afghanistan included media workers and their families, and children, according to the statement. They arrived at Mexico City International Airport early on Wednesday.

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Also Read: U.S. Aims To Complete Evacuations From Afghanistan By August 31 Deadline

Mexico’s Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard said the decision to offer protection to the journalists is “congruent with the historical position of Mexico.”

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“It’s about those who are risking their lives to inform, to communicate; who are committed to freedom of expression,” he said, adding that the group included reporters and local staff members from “many media who have applied for humanitarian visas to Mexico due to the latest events.”

The foreign ministry added in the statement that the travel and living costs of the bunch of people, during their stay in Mexico will be covered by private sponsors and civil society organizations.

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The Committee to Protect Journalists has warned that Afghan journalists of extreme dangers amid the Taliban offensive.

This year at least three female Afghan journalists have been murdered, according to Reporters Without Borders (RSF), one was shot dead by a gunman in December 2020.

The group to flee to Mexico also included Afghan journalists working with the New York Times. The director of International News for the New York Times, Michael Slackman, thanked Mexico for its support and “the rapid dispatch by Mexico’s government of safe transportation for journalists.”

In the statement, Slackman also urged “the entire international community to follow this example and to continue working on behalf of the brave Afghan journalists who are still in danger.”

RSF said the Taliban was already imposing harsh constraints on the news media — and on the other hand, was making promises about protecting press freedom.

“Officially, the new Afghan authorities have not issued any regulations, but the media and reporters are being treated in an arbitrary manner,” RSF secretary-general Christophe Deloire said in a statement.

The group said that at least ten journalists have been a victim to violence or threats while in the streets of Kabul and Jalalabad in the past week doing their work. Following the Taliban advances in the recent weeks, many of the western media with a presence in Afghanistan have evacuated their foreign correspondents and local staff.

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