Al-Jazeera må ikke sende fra Vestbredden

Redaktionen

NEW YORK, July 15, 2009: The Committee to Protect Journalists, CPJ, condemns the Palestinian Authority’s decision Wednesday to suspend the operations of Al-Jazeera in the West Bank after the satellite channel aired a controversial interview on Tuesday. The suspension, according to a Palestinian Authority Ministry of Information statement, will remain in place until “the judiciary issues a ruling on the subject”.

The Ministry of Information’s actions came a day after Al-Jazeera broadcast its talk show “Behind the News” from Doha, Qatar, to discuss accusations made earlier in the day by Faruq al-Qadumi, a Fatah party leader, against Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. Al-Qadumi had told journalists in Amman, Jordan, on Tuesday that Abbas and the former head of the Palestinian Preventive Security Service, Muhammad Dahlan, were involved with Ariel Sharon in a plot to assassinate former President Yasser Arafat and other Palestinian leaders in 2004, according to regional news reports. Many Arab media outlets, including Al-Jazeera, reported on the accusations. ‎

The Ministry of Information said that it plans to file a lawsuit against Al-Jazeera because of its “incitement and unbalanced reporting from the Palestinian territories”.

‎- We are alarmed by this decision of the Palestinian Authority to punish Al-Jazeera for allowing critical discussion of Fatah party affairs, said Robert Mahoney, CPJ’s deputy director, and added: – These are matters of legitimate interest to the Palestinian public. We call on the Ministry of Information to immediately allow ‎Al-Jazeera to resume all its operations in the West Bank.‎

Walid al-Omary, Al-Jazeera’s bureau chief in the West Bank, said that a spokesperson for the Palestinian Authority was invited to participate in the show, ‎but that he was unavailable at the time. An Al-Jazeera presenter read a statement by the Palestinian Authority condemning and rejecting al-‎Qadumi’s accusations at the beginning of the show, he told CPJ. ‎

Both Al-Jazeera Arabic and English service are affected by the suspension, according to The Associated Press. Al-Jazeera has about 30 correspondents, ‎cameramen, fixers, and technicians operating in the West Bank.

Since June 2007 Fatah has consolidated its control over the West Bank, after Hamas ‎‎took control ‎of Gaza and ended a short-lived coalition government. Journalists and publications have been often targeted by the two factions. Both Fatah and ‎Hamas have frequently detained journalists and banned publications that have not espoused ‎the official line.

Kilde: www.cpj.org