Families and friends mourn Zabihullah Tamanna and David Gilkey killed in a Taliban ambush in southern Helmand province.
Tributes have pourned in for Afghan journalist Zabihullah Tamanna and veteran US reporter David Gilkey killed in southern Afghanistan when their vehicle came under Taliban fire.
Gilkey, a veteran news photographer and video editor for National Public Radio (NPR) and 38-year-old Tamanna were traveling on Sunday with an Afghan army unit near Marjah in Helmand province when the convoy came under fire and their vehicle was struck, the US network spokeswoman Isabel Lara said in a statement.
The 38-year-old Tamanna is survived by his wife and three children.
Two other National Public Radio (NPR) journalists travelling with Gilkey in a separate vehicle, reporter Tom Bowman and producer Monika Evstatieva, were unharmed.
Najib Sharifi, who is on the Afghan Safety Committee, told Al Jazeera that what has happened is an extremely heartbreaking situation for the media community in Afghanistan.
“These were two great journalists. Zabihullah Tamanna has been involved in the media since 2001 and David Gilkey has been coming to Afghanistan since 2001.
“He (Gilkey) was a great friend of Afghanistan and has a lot of friends here, as he has once said – he has more friends in Afghanistan than he does in the US,” Sharifi said.
“I was earlier with the family of Zabihullah Tamanna and everybody was shocked, the children did not even known their dad had died.”
Gilkey’s colleagues responded with shock at the news of his sudden death, the first time in NPR’s 46-year history that it has lost a journalist on a reporting assignment.
“David has been covering war and conflict in Iraq and Afghanistan since 9/11. He was devoted to helping the public see these wars and the people caught up in them. He died pursuing that commitment,” said Michael Oreskes, NPR’s senior vice president of news and editorial director.
“Even though much of the world’s attention has shifted away, let no one doubt that Afghanistan remains a dangerous place for journalists – local and foreign – working to cover that protracted conflict,” said Bob Dietz, the Asia program coordinator at the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ).
“There are too many journalists who have given their lives to tell the Afghan story.”
Prior to the deaths of Gilkey and Tamanna, 24 journalists and one media worker have been killed in Afghanistan since the 2001 US-led invasion, said the CPJ.
Afghan President Ashraf Ghani condemned the attack and called it cowardly and “completely against all the principles and values of Islam and humanity, and against all international laws”.
In a statement, Ghani said the Taliban do not distinguish among the military, civilians and journalists, and that they killed Gilkey and Tamanna as the two were reporting on the war. He offered condolences to their families.
Ghani went to Helmand later on Monday to assess the security situation in the poppy growing region, which gives the world most of its heroin, controlled by the Taliban.
US Secretary of State John Kerry called the killings “a grim reminder of the danger that continues to face the Afghan people, the dedication of Afghan national defense and security forces to securing their country, and of the courage of intrepid journalists – and their interpreters – who are trying to convey that important story to the rest of the world.”

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