In an e-mailed statement
to CPJ, ISAF media affairs officer Lt. Cdr. Katie Kendrick said broadly
that "Afghan and
coalition forces had intelligence information linking the men to Taliban
propaganda networks."
Samer
Allawi, Al-Jazeera's bureau chief in Kandahar, told CPJ that ISAF would not
disclose specific details of the arrests, including the two journalists' current
whereabouts. He noted that, like many journalists, the two men have contact
with all parties in the conflict, including the Taliban.
"We
are very concerned by the detentions of Mohammed Nader and Rahmatullah Nekzad,
and we call on ISAF to immediately detail why and where they are being held," said
Bob Dietz, CPJ's Asia program coordinator.
Since the
U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan in late 2001, CPJ has documented several cases
in which journalists have been detained in the Afghanistan-Pakistan theater.
Most were released without charge after being held for brief periods, but two
were held for prolonged periods without ever being charged or tried:
Sami
Muhyideen al-Haj, a 35-year-old
Sudanese national who was an assistant cameraman for Al-Jazeera, was arrested
by Pakistani authorities along the Afghan-Pakistani border while on assignment
for the network in December 2001. He was later transferred to the U.S. military
facility in Guantanamo Bay and held as an accused "enemy combatant." He was released
in May 2008 without ever being charged with a crime.
In
October 2007 Jawed Ahmad, a field producer for the Canadian broadcaster
CTV, was arrested while visiting the ISAF airbase in Kandahar. Pentagon
officials said in a letter to CPJ that Ahmad had been designated an "unlawful
enemy combatant," but they did not disclose specific allegations or evidence
against him. U.S. officials released Ahmad in September 2008 from the U.S.-run
detention facility at Bagram airbase, saying that he no longer posed a threat
to U.S.-led forces. Ahmad, who was never charged with a crime, was later killed
in an unexplained drive-by shooting in Kandhar.
The New York
Times reported Wednesday that a third Afghan journalist,
Hojatullah Mojadadi, a radio reporter and a leader of the Kapisa province journalists
association, was arrested on Saturday by the National Directorate of Security,
Afghanistan's intelligence agency. The Times
quoted Abdul Halim Hayar, a spokesman for the governor. CPJ is seeking details
on Mojadadi's status.

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