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Afghan woman radio boss shot dead | Afghan woman radio boss shot dead |
(about 1 hour later) | |
A female owner of a radio station in Afghanistan has been shot dead. | A female owner of a radio station in Afghanistan has been shot dead. |
Zakia Zaki was shot seven times, including in the chest and head, as she slept with her eight-month-old son at her home north of Kabul, officials say. | |
The governor of Parvan province, where the attack took place, told the BBC he did not know who killed her. No one has admitted carrying out the attack. | |
Her murder came just days after a woman newsreader was killed for reasons which were described as "family-related". | |
'Act of terror' | 'Act of terror' |
The Parvan governor, Abdul Jabbar Taqwa, visited the scene of the killing in the town of Jabal as Siraj, about 70km (40 miles) north of the capital. | |
He said the attackers were three men armed with pistols and rifles, who broke into Ms Zaki's house and got into the bedroom. | He said the attackers were three men armed with pistols and rifles, who broke into Ms Zaki's house and got into the bedroom. |
An older son, aged three, was with her at the time of the attack, but none of her six children was injured. | |
New hopes of Afghan media | New hopes of Afghan media |
The Interior Ministry condemned what it called "this act of terror" and said it was trying to track down the perpetrators. | The Interior Ministry condemned what it called "this act of terror" and said it was trying to track down the perpetrators. |
Zakia Zaki, was 35 years old and worked as a reporter and a schoolteacher. | |
She was one of the few female journalists in the country to speak out during the Taleban's rule. | |
She had also headed the US-funded station, Radio Peace, since it opened after the fall of the Taleban in 2001. | She had also headed the US-funded station, Radio Peace, since it opened after the fall of the Taleban in 2001. |
The BBC's Charles Haviland in Kabul says that at times Ms Zaki criticised the former mujahideen, some of who have been implicated in war crimes. | |
Observers say that the motive behind the murder is far from clear, and a massive police operation is now underway to identify and arrest the killers. | |
'Freedom of expression' | |
Zakia Zaki started her radio career eight years ago. At the time Parvan province was one of the few areas in the country to be controlled by anti-Taleban forces. | |
The media in Afghanistan works under lots of restrictions | |
The Independent Association of Afghan Journalists has condemned the murder, describing it as an example of how difficult the working environment has become for journalists and especially for women. | |
"She believed in freedom of expression, that's why she was killed," the association's head Rahimullah Samander told Reuters. | |
The group said she had received threats in the past but had no personal enemies. | |
The killing comes six days after the shooting dead of another Afghan woman working in journalism, a 22-year-old newsreader from a private television station, Shokiba Sanga Amaaj. | |
According to senior police sources in Kabul, her father has blamed two male relatives and one person has been arrested. | According to senior police sources in Kabul, her father has blamed two male relatives and one person has been arrested. |