Arab States impose curbs on satellite TV

IN Media Freedom | 13/02/2008
Over the opposition solely of Qatar, the home of Al-Jazeera, information ministers of the 22-member Arab League voted in favor of the document.
Pix: Al Jazeera’s newsroom

At the initiative of Egypt and Saudi Arabia, Arab countries on February 12 adopted a document which imposes curbs on Arab satellite television and bars offending their regimes. Over the opposition solely of Qatar, the home of Al-Jazeera, information ministers of the 22-member Arab League voted in favor of the document.

 

The meeting was convened in Cairo on Tuesday 12 February 2008 at the request of Egypt and with the support of Saudi Arabia. The final non-binding document, adopted by all member states of the Arab League with the exception of Qatar and Lebanon, requires Satellite TV broadcasting in the region: 

 

The document threatens to "withdraw, freeze or not renew the work permits of media which will break the regulations". It calls on member states to introduce all necessary measures in their national legislations in order to ensure that the document¿s principles are fully implemented.

 

ARTICLE 19 has condemned the adoption of the ¿Principles for Organising Satellite TV in the Arab World¿ charter agreed yesterday by the Arab Ministers of Information in Egypt.

 

"These principles constitute a major set back to freedom of the press and freedom of expression in the Arab world. They attempt to muzzle what has become the main source of independent news and information for millions of people in the region. Once again, intolerance and control prevail over freedom and the free and diverse flow of information." said Dr. Agnes Callamard, ARTICLE 19¿s Executive Director.

 

The provisions, if implemented, will inevitably mute and hinder the only avenue for free expression in the region: satellite TV. They stand in direct contradiction with Article 32 of the Arab Charter on Human Rights which guarantees the right to information and freedom of expression and which was adopted by the Council of Ministers of the League of Arab States in 2004. The provisions also violate article 19 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights ratified by many governments in the region.