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Account Executive in Public Relations
Industry: Marketing & PR
Location: Middle East, UAE -
Marketing Executive
Industry: Marketing & PR
Location: Dubai, UAE
A 'device to shut the Arab mouth'
by Lynne Roberts on Monday, 05 May 2008
A restrictive broadcast charter adopted by the Arab League earlier this year was slammed by media experts on Sunday as a "device to shut the Arab mouth", and a "sword hanging on the Arab television".
Participants at the Arab Media Transmission Forum in Abu Dhabi described the charter, which seeks to curtail political and religious expression, as "censorial", "overbroad" and "harshly restrictive", reported emirates news agency Wam.
Under the charter, broadcasters could have their licences revoked for criticising religions or defaming political, national and religious leaders.
The document, endorsed by Arab information ministers in Cairo in February, bans the broadcast of material seen as undermining “social peace, national unity, public order and general propriety”.
RELATED: Broadcaster freedom under threat
Arab League Secretary General Amro Moosa called on participants to debate the charter in a recorded message broadcast to the forum, saying it was the right of every Arab citizen to live in an era of openness.
A heated debate followed, with those who had helped draft the charter defending it as a balance of "expansive openness couple with zones of prohibition", Wam reported, without naming the participants.
The charter has met with widespread criticism from media watchdogs and rights groups, who said it would impede the right of people in the region to receive news and commentary reflecting critical opinions.
RELATED: Al-Jazeera hits out at restrictive broadcast charter
Egypt has hit back at critics, saying the document, which is not legally binding, was not meant to restrict freedom but to "organise" media at a time when satellite channels were “spreading ignorant messages and illegitimate religious edicts”.
RELATED: Broadcast charter does not restrict freedom, claims Egypt
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USER COMMENTS (6 COMMENTS)
Posted by richard, wadhurst, UK on 9 May 2008 at 13:08 UAE time
You lucky, lucky people. Wouldn't life be so much better without the Daily Mail? After all it's not news, is it? What it is is political and emotional scaremongering of the highest order designed to appeal to those who can't see the wood for the trees.
Posted by Mark Sutton, editor itp.net, Dubai on 8 May 2008 at 13:12 UAE time
The site has been unblocked now, Etisalat tell us it was blocked by a technical error.
Posted by Lee, Dubai, UAE on 8 May 2008 at 11:49 UAE time
The Daily Mail website is blocked...I just tried it again and I cannot get in.
Posted by Riz, Dubai, UAE on 7 May 2008 at 11:59 UAE time
Which country is the website banned in? I just browsed it here in the UAE!
Posted by David Stephens on 7 May 2008 at 10:54 UAE time
The Daily Mail newspaper's website is blocked, as of today. This will be highly effective in protecting the country from this menace, as walking to the shop to buy a copy is moderately inconvenient.
Posted by stuart mayhead, Abu Dhabi, UAE on 5 May 2008 at 07:36 UAE time
Well I believe 'no comment' is the safest response! And I suppose people living in Zimbabwe would agree.
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