keralamonitor.com
International
Journalist body urges Kuwait Emir to release Imprisoned
journalists
Kuwait City: The Committee
to Protect Journalists (CPJ), an international body of journalists
to protect freedom of press, has written a strong letter
to Sheikh Jaber al-Ahmed al-Sabah, Emir of the State of Kuwait,
about the fate of two Kuwaiti journalists imprisoned by the Kuwaiti
government allegedly for helping Saddam Hussain and Iraq during
the aborted invasion. CPJ is writing to reiterate its concern
about the plight of two journalists currently serving life sentences
in Kuwait for their alleged collaboration with Iraq during its
occupation of Kuwait 10 years ago
.
Fawwaz Muhammad al-Awadi Bessisso and Ibtisam
Berto Sulaiman al-Dakhil are the last remaining journalists in
jail in Kuwait. A martial law tribunal convicted them of collaboration
in June 1991, based on their work with the Iraqi occupation newspaper
Al-Nida, says Ann K. Cooper Executive Director
in a letter to the Emir, urging him to release the journalists
ten years after the invasion.
Their trial, which began on May 19, 1991, failed to comply
with international standards of justice. The defendants said
that they were tortured during their interrogations. And prosecutors
failed to rebut their defense that they had been coerced into
working for Al-Nida. On June 16, 1991, the journalists
were sentenced to death. Ten days later, following international
protests, all martial-law death sentences were commuted to life
terms, the CPJ letter pointed out.
CPJ has welcomed the release of some 15 former employees
of Al-Nida who have been freed since 1996, most on the
occasion of Your Highness' annual prisoner amnesty in February.
Yet both Bessisso and al-Dakhil remain in jail, it added.
We believe that the decade anniversary of the Gulf War
and the liberation of Kuwait are an opportunity for Kuwait to
close this unfortunate chapter and free both journalists. We
recall that during an April 2, 1999, meeting between CPJ representatives
and Kuwaiti ambassador Dr. Muhammad al-Sabah in Washington DC,
Dr. al-Sabah remarked that he was "hopeful that we will
be in a position to say that there will be no one in jail from
the Iraqi occupation in the near future" -­a reference
to CPJ's appeal for the release of Bessisso and al-Dakhil,
it said.
It is in this spirit that CPJ, a non-governmental organization
of journalists devoted to upholding press freedom worldwide,
calls on the Emir to amnesty Fawwaz Muhammad al-Awadi Bessisso
and Ibtisam Berto Sulaiman al-Dakhil.
Press Freedom:
Special Report:
Courtesy: Committee to Protect Journalists:
Over the past two decades, journalism
has made tremendous strides in the oil-rich monarchies of the
Arabian peninsula. Benefiting from generous budgets and advanced
technology, private newspapers have flourished. Some are now
counted among the most influential papers in the Arab world.
But for the most part, journalism in the member states of the
Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC)--Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Kuwait,
Oman, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE)--remains far
from free. In these highly autocratic states, independent journalists
are hindered by a variety of official and self-imposed constraints.
However, the citizens of the GCC are increasingly turning to
satellite TV and the Internet for alternatives to suffocating
official media.
Severe
punishment against News Outlets in Kuwait
Actions taken against media outlets
and journalists typically involve charges of damaging the national
interest or insulting religion, morality, or the person of the
Amir. For example:On February 14, 2000 the Council of Ministers
revoked the permit of the daily newspaper al-Siyassa and suspended
publication of the daily newspaper al-Watan for two years after
they reported on an Amiri decree raising salaries of members
of the military and security forces. The government denied that
it had issued the decree, which had been faxed anonymously to
the newspapers. After strong criticism by members of parliament
opposed to the intervention by the Council of Ministers, the
Amir issued a decree revoking the Council of Minister's actions
against the newspapers...Read earlier
reports
BROADCASTING IN THE GULF
Saudi Arabia continues to exert considerable leverage
over the influential pan-Arab media. Royal-family
members and Saudi businessmen with close links to the royal family
own several important regional newspapers and television stations.
The prominent London-based Arabic daily Al-Hayat and its
sister magazine, Al-Wasat, are owned by Prince Khaled
Bin Sultan, a nephew of King Fahd. Another influential pan-Arab
paper, the London-based daily Al-Sharq al-Awsat, is owned
by Prince Ahmad Bin Salman.
In the TV arena, Middle East Broadcasting Centre (MBC) is owned
by prominent Saudi businessman Sheikh Walid al-Ibrahim, a brother-in-law
of King Fahd. Two other powerhouse regional networks, Orbit and
Arab Radio and Television (ART), are also Saudi-owned. All these
stations avoid any programming that might offend the Saudi regime.
Even news about political developments in neighboring Arab countries
is notably restrained. Some observers contend that this stems
from Saudis fears of provoking retaliatory attacks from media
in those countries.
But this Saudi dominance of regional media has been significantly
weakened by the growing popularity and influence of the Qatar-based
Al-Jazeera satellite channel. Founded in 1996 with a start-up
grant of $140 million from the Qatari government, the station
has swiftly transformed the pan-Arab media scene through its
bold, uncensored coverage of regional events. Tackling controversial
subjects such as human rights, social and religious taboos, and
the views of political dissidents, the station has become the
most popular news station in the Arab world. Al-Jazeera has made
it difficult for more docile stations such as MBC to maintain
their pretense of objectivity.
The station's hard-hitting coverage provoked a steady chorus
of condemnation from Arab states. In June, Kuwait banned Al-Jazeera's
reporters from working in the country after an Iraqi caller criticized
Emir Jaber al-Ahmed al-Sabah during a live call-in talk show.
The station's reporters were apparently prohibited from entering
Saudi Arabia, and Saudi authorities banned all satellite transmissions
at public coffeehouses in Riyadh in July, apparently to keep
the station out of public view. The move followed Al-Jazeera's
broadcast of a program in which a Kuwaiti intellectual criticized
monarchical rule in the gulf states.
Saudi authorities have adopted other, more subtle tactics to
pressure Al-Jazeera. In the spring of 1999, the Saudi government
reportedly asked Al-Jazeera's Saudi-owned advertising agency,
Tihama, not to place ads with the station and has urged other
local advertisers to follow suit.
THE GULF ONLINE
Internet use in the gulf states continued to grow despite government
censorship in some countries. In January 1999, Saudi Arabia allowed
public access to the Internet after years of preparation, but
authorities maintained tight control over the sites that users
can access. In order to keep out undesirable material, the Saudis
have instituted one of the world's most thorough Web-filtering
systems. Although private Internet service providers exist, all
information accessed from the Internet must first pass through
a government proxy server designed to filter out morally and
politically undesirable sites. According to the U.S.-based Human
Rights Watch, Saudi officials contend that the filtering system
is designed to keep out sexually oriented material. Even so,
"the site of at least one exiled dissident group, the Committee
Against Corruption in Saudi Arabia, was reportedly blocked."
The Saudi filtering system seems modeled on one already in place
in the United Arab Emirates, where authorities also use a proxy
server to weed out morally offensive materials. It is unclear
to what extent the UAE system also blocks politically sensitive
content.