Source: Committee to
Protect Journalists, New York
The
Committee to Protect Journalists called for Saudi-run satellite operator Arabsat
to return to air the Iranian-owned Arabic-language satellite channel
Al-Alam, which stopped broadcasting January
27 without prior notice,
according to
international news reports.
In a
statement published on
its Web site, Al-Alam said that "Arabsat, in continuation of its censorship
policies and as a move to confront the news networks which reflect the realities
of the world, has today once again cut broadcasting of the Al-Alam network." Al-Alam
was previously taken off
the air by both Arabsat and the Cairo-based satellite service provider Nilesat
in November. Both cited a contractual breach without elaborating further.
Al-Alam was previously taken
off the air by both Arabsat and the Cairo-based satellite service
provider Nilesat in November. Both cited a contractual breach without
elaborating further.
According to a statement
released by
Arabsat
Operation Center, the satellite is "dealing with an
'interfering' carrier,"
Press TV
reported.
"We urge Arabsat officials to
resolve any outstanding technical difficulties they may have and put Al-Alam
back on the air as soon as possible," said Mohamed Abdel Dayem, CPJ's Middle
East and
North Africa program coordinator. "Viewers have
a right to receive information from multiple sources, even critical ones."
Al-Alam has been a vocal critic
of
Saudi Arabia's involvement in
the insurgency in northern Yemen, Mohamed Dehavi, an Al-Alam
spokesman, told CPJ. "We do not believe that this is a technical issue like
Arabsat is claiming, but rather a political one aimed at censoring Al-Alam's
coverage of current events," he added.
The Yemeni government has been
engaged in a years-long fight against disenfranchised Shia rebels in the north
of the country.
Arabsat did not respond to
CPJ's repeated requests for comment.
... Payvand News - 02/04/10 ... --
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