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     Issue Date   Thursday   7   February   2008     Issue    1334  



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Egyptian-Saudi Pressures to Impose Political Restrictions on Satellite Channels


  By   Heba Hassanein    7/ 2/ 2008

Anas El-Fiki

Al-Masry Al-Youm has learnt that Egypt's Information Minister Anas El-Fiki and his Saudi counterpart Iyad Madani have agreed to submit a bill that would amend the regulations of Arab satellite TV channels at the meeting of the Arab Information Ministers in Cairo on February 12 and 13.

According to the bill, which the two ministers intend to issue in the conference closing statement, new rules would be set which all Arab satellite stations should abide by. They would be signed as annex to the contract concluded between the station and the State that grants it the license.

The bill also sets specific penalties for any transgressions, ranging from warning the station to revoking its license indefinitely.

Informed sources told al-Masry al-Youm that the Egyptian Ministry of Information resorted to a committee of experts to set these rules in coordination with its Saudi counterpart.

The sources also pointed out that these rules focused on "political dangers" to impose lower ceilings on political programs and daily talk shows which have lately enraged Egyptian and Saudi rulers.

The sources indicated that this bill comes on the backdrop of the measures recently taken by Egypt and Saudi Arabia to reduce satellite channels' liberty. For instance, the new 'Al-Hayat al-Masriya' channel, which was due to go on air on January 18, has been banned.

According to the sources, the Ministry of Information informed officials at the Egyptian Media Production City (EMPC) that the channel would not be authorized to do its pilot broadcast.

The Ministry also banned a daily program entitled "Sa'a bi Sa'a" [By the Hour] that was due to start on February 3 on El-Sa'a channel.

For its part, Saudi Arabia stopped Al-Ekhbariya live programs after it accused the channel of causing disorder. Saudi Arabia is also aiming at making the attacks from al-Jazeera programs less fierce.

According to the sources, Anas El-Fiki and Iyad Madani have been more and more in contact with their Arab counterparts to secure their support to this bill and have agreed on the necessity to pass it.

El-Fiki postponed the approval of Al-Hayat channel and El-Sa'a's program after the new regulations had been adopted and the officials at the two stations had signed them.

 


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