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New York Times slams 'misguided attack on Al Jazeera'

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New York Times slams 'misguided attack on Al Jazeera'

New York Times condemns Saudi-led bloc's move to 'eliminate a voice that could lead citizens to question their rulers'.

  • Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Yemen moved to isolate Qatar earlier this month, the Editorial Board of The New York Times (NYT) wrote in an opinion piece published on Thursday.

    "Qatar’s critics accuse the station of supporting Sunni Islamist terrorism and Iranian ambitions. But Saudi Arabia is hardly innocent when it comes to spreading Islamist extremism or supporting terrorist groups," the Board wrote.

    By attacking Al Jazeera, Saudi Arabia and its anti-Qatar coalition are attempting to "eliminate a voice that could lead citizens to question their rulers".



    Will the war of words hamper efforts to resolve the Gulf crisis?
    Al Jazeera was a key source of news as the Arab Spring rolled across the Middle East, and particularly as Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak's government was toppled in Egypt.


    Mubarak's overthrow was followed by Egypt's "first free election", according to the NYT, which brought Mohamed Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood to power.


    Founded in Egypt in 1928, the Muslim Brotherhood is the Middle East's oldest political party.

    Qatar has been accused by the Saudi Arabia and its allies of supporting the Brotherhood, a group they have labelled "extremists".


    But, according to the NYT Editorial Board, "the real reason [the Muslim Brotherhood has] been labeled a terrorist group is that autocratic regimes see it as a populist threat".


    Egyptian President Abdel Fateh el-Sisi, who overthrew Morsi in a 2013 military coup, has since "moved brutally to quash dissent and eviscerate the Brotherhood", imprisoning three Al Jazeera English journalists in the process on the grounds that the network supported the Muslim Brotherhood.

    "Now, a drive is on against Al Jazeera and free speech in the region," the NYT wrote.

    READ MORE - Qatar-Gulf crisis: All the latest updates

    In May, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and the UAE moved to block the websites of Al Jazeera and Qatari media outlets. In June, Jordan closed Al Jazeera’s bureau in Amman and stripped it of its operating licence.

    The next day Saudi Arabia shut down Al Jazeera’s office in Riyadh and revoked its operating licence, and ordered hotels to block all of its channels.

    "Al Jazeera is hardly a perfect news organisation," but much of its reporting "hews to international journalistic standards, provides a unique view on events in the Middle East and serves as a vital news source for millions who live under antidemocratic rule," the NYT wrote.

    "Those are reasons enough for the monarchs and dictators attacking Qatar to silence Al Jazeera. And reason enough to condemn their action."


    http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2017/...guided-attack-al-jazeera-170621193513866.html
 
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LOL you just know that things are really sour when NYT has to defend Al Jazeera.
 
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NYT is not the issue here. Tell me, the part I highlighted, are they not facts?

Certainly true, but it is bitter irony that the NYT forgot to criticize its own leaders for supporting dictators in that part of the world.
 
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Certainly true, but it is bitter irony that the NYT forgot to criticize its own leaders for supporting dictators in that part of the world.

That is true as well. This is why I find it funny when they talk about the standard of other news channels.
 
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New York Times condemns Saudi-led bloc's move to 'eliminate a voice that could lead citizens to question their rulers'.


Comment:
but that voice never leads the Qatari citizens to question their Emirs, so why don't they start from their own country?
 
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New York Times condemns Saudi-led bloc's move to 'eliminate a voice that could lead citizens to question their rulers'.


Comment:
but that voice never leads the Qatari citizens to question their Emirs, so why don't they start from their own country?
You have valid point ... hhmmm its very tricky situation . New York times is beast of Isreal. If they publishing this news then ..... seems Qatari has better stand then KSA at this time ...but time after time some Indian journalist of NY time also write anti Pakistan column.
 
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NYT is not the issue here. Tell me, the part I highlighted, are they not facts?


It wasn't too long ago when al Jazeera just started... when all western media houses were labelling al jazeera as AL Qaeeda mouth piece... but all that quickly faded away when al Jazeera real purpose was revealed... to instigate "Arab Springs" and from the ashes of war bring forth ISIS...

Now these same Zionist western new York times is crying for the demise of their disinformation outlet..
 
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It wasn't too long ago when al Jazeera just started... when all western media houses were labelling al jazeera as AL Qaeeda mouth piece... but all that quickly faded away when al Jazeera real purpose was revealed... to instigate "Arab Springs" and from the ashes of war bring forth ISIS...

They used slander against this news channel and now the SA regime and its tentacles are doing it.
 
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They used slander against this news channel and now the SA regime and its tentacles are doing it.

Both parties are sick... in some fights... there isn't a good guy... it's just two baddies fighting... time to take out the popcorn and sit back watch the fireworks.
 
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Both parties are sick... in some fights... there isn't a good guy... it's just two baddies fighting... time to take out the popcorn and sit back watch the fireworks.

The only good guy is the legitimate aspirations of the people and in the Middle East under mafia rule MB represents it best.
 
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New York Times condemns Saudi-led bloc's move to 'eliminate a voice that could lead citizens to question their rulers'.


Comment:
but that voice never leads the Qatari citizens to question their Emirs, so why don't they start from their own country?
I thought you are aware that in certain sheikdom and kingdom that'll be really hazardous to your health .
Have you forget the rules that some countries put in place after the move to isolate Qatar ?
 
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I remember when a Qatari citizen got life in jail for writing a poem during the Arab Spring and not a beep came out of Aljazeera. lol

Qatari poet jailed for life after writing verse inspired by Arab spring
Officials claim Muhammad ibn al-Dheeb al-Ajami's poem encouraged overthrow of Qatar's ruling system


Qatari-emir-009.jpg

The poet was accused of insulting Qatar's emir, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, pictured. Photograph: Hatem Moussa/AP
This article is 4 years old
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Associated Press in Doha

Thursday 29 November 2012 16.37 GMTFirst published on Thursday 29 November 2012 16.37 GMT

A Qatari poet has been sentenced to life in prison for an Arab-spring-inspired verse that officials claim insults Qatar's emir and encourages the overthrow of the nation's ruling system, his defence attorney says.

It was the latest blow in a widening clampdown on perceived dissent across the Gulf Arab states.

The verdict in a state security court is certain to bring a fresh outpouring of denunciations by rights groups, which have repeatedly called for the release of the poet, Muhammad ibn al-Dheeb al-Ajami. It also marks another example of tough measures by judicial and security officials in the Gulf against possible challenges to their rule since the Arab spring revolts began last year.

The poet's lawyer, Najib al-Nuaimi, said he planned to appeal.

"This judge made the whole trial secret," said Nuaimi. "Muhammad was not allowed to defend himself, and I was not allowed to plead or defend in court. I told the judge that I need to defend my client in front of an open court, and he stopped me."

Ajami was jailed in November 2011, months after an internet video was posted of him reciting Tunisian Jasmine, a poem lauding that country's popular uprising, which touched off the Arab spring rebellions across the Middle East. In the poem, he said: "We are all Tunisia in the face of repressive" authorities, and criticised Arab governments that restrict freedoms.

Qatari officials charged Ajami with "insulting" the Gulf nation's ruler, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, and "inciting to overthrow the ruling system". The latter charge could have brought a death sentence.

Nuaimi said Ajami, a third-year student of literature at Cairo University, had been held in solitary confinement since his arrest.

Gulf regimes have stepped up crackdowns on a range of perceived threats to their rule, including Islamist groups and social media activists. Earlier this month, Kuwaiti authorities arrested four people on charges of insulting the emir with Twitter posts, and the United Arab Emirates imposed sweeping new internet regulations that allow arrests for a wide list of offensives, including insulting leaders or calling for demonstrations.

Last year, Bahrain issued a royal pardon for some protest-linked suspects, including a 20-year-old woman sentenced to a year in prison for reciting poetry critical of the government's effort to crush a Shia-led uprising against the Sunni monarchy.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2012/nov/29/qatari-poet-jailed-arab-spring
 
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I remember when a Qatari citizen got life in jail for writing a poem during the Arab Spring and not a beep came out of Aljazeera. lol

Qatari poet jailed for life after writing verse inspired by Arab spring
Officials claim Muhammad ibn al-Dheeb al-Ajami's poem encouraged overthrow of Qatar's ruling system


Qatari-emir-009.jpg

The poet was accused of insulting Qatar's emir, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, pictured. Photograph: Hatem Moussa/AP
This article is 4 years old
Shares
142

Associated Press in Doha

Thursday 29 November 2012 16.37 GMTFirst published on Thursday 29 November 2012 16.37 GMT

A Qatari poet has been sentenced to life in prison for an Arab-spring-inspired verse that officials claim insults Qatar's emir and encourages the overthrow of the nation's ruling system, his defence attorney says.

It was the latest blow in a widening clampdown on perceived dissent across the Gulf Arab states.

The verdict in a state security court is certain to bring a fresh outpouring of denunciations by rights groups, which have repeatedly called for the release of the poet, Muhammad ibn al-Dheeb al-Ajami. It also marks another example of tough measures by judicial and security officials in the Gulf against possible challenges to their rule since the Arab spring revolts began last year.

The poet's lawyer, Najib al-Nuaimi, said he planned to appeal.

"This judge made the whole trial secret," said Nuaimi. "Muhammad was not allowed to defend himself, and I was not allowed to plead or defend in court. I told the judge that I need to defend my client in front of an open court, and he stopped me."

Ajami was jailed in November 2011, months after an internet video was posted of him reciting Tunisian Jasmine, a poem lauding that country's popular uprising, which touched off the Arab spring rebellions across the Middle East. In the poem, he said: "We are all Tunisia in the face of repressive" authorities, and criticised Arab governments that restrict freedoms.

Qatari officials charged Ajami with "insulting" the Gulf nation's ruler, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, and "inciting to overthrow the ruling system". The latter charge could have brought a death sentence.

Nuaimi said Ajami, a third-year student of literature at Cairo University, had been held in solitary confinement since his arrest.

Gulf regimes have stepped up crackdowns on a range of perceived threats to their rule, including Islamist groups and social media activists. Earlier this month, Kuwaiti authorities arrested four people on charges of insulting the emir with Twitter posts, and the United Arab Emirates imposed sweeping new internet regulations that allow arrests for a wide list of offensives, including insulting leaders or calling for demonstrations.

Last year, Bahrain issued a royal pardon for some protest-linked suspects, including a 20-year-old woman sentenced to a year in prison for reciting poetry critical of the government's effort to crush a Shia-led uprising against the Sunni monarchy.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2012/nov/29/qatari-poet-jailed-arab-spring
Aljazeera is good boy ... one of those days ... lolz
 
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Saudi demands from Qatar seen as breach of sovereignty
ALI ÜNAL @ali_unal
ANKARA
Published 14 hours ago
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Turkish soldiers deployed at the Turkish base in Qatar leave a military plane in Qatar's Udeid military airbase, June 22, 2017. (AA Photo)
A 13-article list of demands from Saudi-led anti-Qatar axis has been interpreted by analysts as a breach of Qatar's sovereignty, severe, and that it is far away from acceptable diplomatic norms.

Kuwait delivered the demands of four Gulf Arab states to end the diplomatic crisis with Qatar on Friday, The Associated Press and several other news agencies reported Friday.

Commenting on the list of demands Muhittin Ataman from the Foundation for Political, Economic and Social Research (SETA) said: "When I saw these requests, I thought that Qatar's independence is trying to be taken away from it. I see it is a series of requests aimed at turning Qatar into a country dependent on Saudi Arabia, because all of them target Doha's political sovereignty, territorial integrity and independence.

"It is interfering with Qatar's international affairs one way or another. It is against the main principles of international laws. These demands definitely cannot be accepted as a sovereign state."

The 13 demands also include calls to shut down the Turkish military base in Qatar.

"Our most important demand is a solution to the problem without turning it into an embargo. If there is a problem, it should be solved at the table," Defense Minister Fikri Işık said in a live interview with the NTV private broadcaster Friday following the Gulf states giving Qatar a 13-article list of demands.

Işık said that they have no intention of reassessing the status of the Turkish military base in Qatar, and it would be interference in bilateral ties. "I still haven't seen the official request, but if there is such a demand, it would be interference in bilateral ties." Işık said in the interview. "The base in Qatar is both a Turkish base and one that will preserve the security of Qatar and the region. It is an important military base, and no country should be disturbed by it," he added.

Speaking to Daily Sabah, Özcan Tikit from HaberTurk daily said: ''Some of these demands have already known, however, Gulf countries' call to shut down Turkish Military base was surprising for us. This demand amid Turkey's mediation efforts to solve this crisis via diplomacy and after Turkish Foreign Minister Çavuşoğlu's recent visit to Gulf countries as well as President Erdoğan's phone call with Saudi King on Thursday. It seems to me that the Gulf countries don't want to understand Turkey's messages that urge them to solve the crisis through dialogue and apparently Gulf crisis will likely to evolve worse stage in the coming days."

According to Ataman, the main reason why there is a demand that Qatar shut down Turkey's military base in the country is opposition to the joint regional perspective of Doha and Ankara. "The joint regional vision that Turkey and Qatar display are under attack. When taken into consideration, this demand should not be surprising," he said.

Apart from calls to close the Turkish base in the country, four Gulf Arab states demanded the shuttering of Al-Jazeera TV and cutting ties with Iran. They also demanded that Qatar make a declaration against terrorist groups, including Daesh and al-Qaeda, halt funding to those organizations and hand over any individuals from those organizations in the country. Other demands pressed Qatar to "stop interfering in other countries' domestic affairs," to give an unspecified amount of compensation to countries that presented these demands, honor the Riyadh agreements of 2013 and 2014 and shut down all other media supported by Qatar. The Gulf states gave Qatar 10 days to comply with their demands. The United Arab Emirates (UAE) on Friday advised Qatar to take a list of stern demands drawn up by its neighbors seriously or the diplomatic crisis in the Gulf would "turn into a divorce" with Doha.

Galip Dalay from Al-Sharq forum said that the demands are "neither reasonable nor actionable and there are far from what the U.S. State Department asked for when it said that it is waiting to see the blockading countries provide their list of grievances to Qatar, which were supposed to be reasonable and actionable."

"Moreover, the list contains many contradictions. While asking Qatar to downgrade its diplomatic ties to Iran, all the blockading countries enjoy diplomatic ties with Iran, except Saudi Arabia. And Saudi Arabia cut diplomatic ties with Iran only after Iranian protesters attacked the Saudi diplomatic missions in Iran after Saudi Arabia executed Shiite cleric Nimr al-Nimr last year. Likewise,the UAE is only second to China for Iran's foreign trade," he added.

"We hope the list of demands will soon be presented to Qatar and will be reasonable and actionable," U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson had said on Wednesday.

Meanwhile, Qatar rejected the claim that it supported al-Nusra Front, the former Syrian branch of al-Qaeda, or any armed group. "Qatar does not support al-Nusra Front in Syria. ... And it does not support any terrorist organization," Qatari Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani said in an interview with France 24 on Thursday.

Since the beginning of the crisis, Turkey has played a mediating role to solve the Gulf crisis through dialogue. Ankara has tried to weather the storm after several Gulf countries severed ties with Qatar and imposed sanctions on the small Gulf emirate, with President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan carring out diplomacy over the phone with many heads of state and governments from the Gulf region and the West in an effort to actively take part in the search for a peaceful solution to the crisis. Last week, Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu also visited Qatar, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia as a mediator to resolve the diplomatic crisis through dialogue. As Turkey has continued its effort to solve the crisis, Ankara urged Saudi Arabia to lead dialogue efforts and solve the Qatar issue peacefully. On Thursday, Erdoğan spoke on the phone with Saudi Arabia's King Salman and newly appointed Crown Prince Mohamed bin Salman, during which they agreed "to increase the efforts to end the tension in the axis of Qatar." Erdoğan congratulated Mohamed bin Salman on being named crown prince and they both expressed a desire for stronger ties between their countries, presidential sources said. In addition, presidential spokesman İbrahim Kalın said that Saudi Arabia could play a very influential role in finding a peaceful solution. "Of course, as the strongest country in the Gulf and one of the biggest countries in the Islamic world, Saudi Arabia will play a big role to overcome the tensions with Qatar and find a peaceful solution. During the meeting [between Erdoğan and Salman], this was also underlined," he said. Kalın also said that the Gulf states are important partners for Turkey and that Ankara does not want any sort of tension. "We also do not want them to be in any crises among themselves. This has been our approach from the beginning," he affirmed.

On June 19, Turkish troops arrived in Qatar for a long-planned joint military training program, the Qatari Defense Ministry said, following Parliament fast-tracking legislation to deploy to the military base in Qatar on June 7. Turkey has a military base in Qatar that currently houses about 90 Turkish soldiers. The first batch of 25 Turkish soldiers who left for Qatar to be stationed at the base arrived in early Thursday. Turkey will also send five armored vehicles as part of the first unit of deployment. The deal that would allow the troop deployment to Qatar to improve the country's armed forces and boost military cooperation was signed in April 2016 in Doha. Under the legislation, the military forces of both countries will also be able to carry out joint exercises. Officials from both Qatar and Turkey have said the move is to contribute to regional and world peace.

The real reason behind this crisis is now clear. All those terrorism charges are just hogwash and we've been saying this all along.
 
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