Afghanistan's lower house of Parliament passed a resolution Monday seeking to bar television programs from showing dancing and other practices deemed un-Islamic.
The decision came just days after the private Tolo TV channel aired a dance number featuring men and women together on an Afghan film awards program.
The Information and Culture Ministry condemned the scene, saying "dancing by men and women together was completely against the culture of the Afghan, Muslim society."
The parliamentary resolution, drafted by a commission for cultural and religious affairs, said dancers should not be shown on television, and un-Islamic scenes should be cut from Indian TV series broadcast in Afghanistan, said Din Mohammad Azimi, a lawmaker and member of the commission.
Azimi said the resolution also includes an article saying Afghan banks should not offer interest-bearing accounts because Islamic law forbids interest.
The resolution, which is not now legally binding and cannot be enforced, will go before the upper house of Parliament for consideration, Azimi said. It would also have to be approved by the president before becoming law.
Afghanistan's media landscape has bloomed following the fall of the hard-line Taliban regime in 2001, and Tolo TV has become one of the country's most popular channels with its steady stream of programing, including music videos and Indian soap operas.
|
|
|||||||||
|
Login
Search
This Month
Month Archive
who employs me
|
Afghan lawmakers move to censor TV
Comments
No comments found.
Trackbacks
TrackBack URL: |
email this blog
Don't have a reader account, but still want to commend/castigate? Send an email.
recent articles
News sites i can't live without
The craft
Blogs i admit to viewing
blogs i don't admit to viewing
Amusements, diversions
muzeek
|
|||||||