http://www.smh.com.au/news/world/afghan-journalist-shot-dead-in-her-bed/2007/06/07/1181089239684.html


Afghan journalist shot dead in her bed
Declan Walsh in Islamabad
June 8, 2007


A PROMINENT Afghan journalist has been shot dead at her home near Kabul, the 
second such killing in five days.

Gunmen fired seven bullets into Zakia Zaki, the head of a radio station, as she 
slept with her eight-month-old son on Tuesday night. She died instantly.

The shooting took place in Parwan, a normally peaceful district north of Kabul 
not usually associated with Taliban activity.

The Interior Ministry condemned the "act of terror". Police said on Wednesday 
that they had detained four men in connection with the killing.

Zaki, 35, had run the US-funded station Peace Radio since the fall of the 
Taliban in 2001. She was also the head teacher of a local school and had stood 
for parliament in 2005.

She had received warnings from powerful local commanders to tone down her 
reporting, the Afghan Independent Journalists Association said.

"This is a very bad day for female journalists. Our work is becoming 
increasingly dangerous," said Farida Nekzad, of Pajhwok, an Afghan news agency.

The killing highlights the risks faced by reporters, particularly women. 
Conservative Afghans dislike women working in the media, and some who have 
ignored warnings have been killed. On Friday, a 22-year-old television news 
presenter, Sanga Amach, was murdered at her Kabul home. Amach had also been 
ordered by unidentified people to stop her work.

Authorities said they had arrested suspects in connection with her murder.

Two years ago a popular television presenter was shot dead at her house in 
Kabul. Her death was believed to have been carried out by a relative because 
she was deemed to have offended her family's honour.

Independent media have flourished in Afghanistan since the Taliban was 
overthrown. Dozens of radio and television stations have opened. Many channels 
run mostly entertainment programs and some of their offerings are seen as too 
modern in the deeply conservative Islamic nation.


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