The Mercury News

Al-Jazeera manager denounces Gulf demands

- By Adam Schreck

A top Al-Jazeera official on Friday denounced demands to shut down the network by countries involved in a dispute with its host nation Qatar as an attempt to suppress free expression.

Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain broke ties with Qatar and restricted access to land, sea and air routes earlier this month over allegation­s it funds terrorism — an accusation Doha rejects but that President Donald Trump has echoed. The move has left Qatar, whose only land border is shared with Saudi Arabia, under a de facto blockade by its neighbors.

The countries delivered a list of demands to end the embargo Thursday and gave Qatar 10 days to comply with the ultimatum. The 13-point list calls for Al-Jazeera and all its affiliates to be shut down.

“Any call to close down or curtail Al-Jazeera is nothing but an attempt to muzzle a voice of democracy in the region and suppress freedom of expression,” Giles Trendle, the acting managing director of Al-Jazeera English, told The Associated Press by phone from its Doha headquarte­rs.

He reiterated the position taken by the Qatari government that shuttering the network is not an item up for negotiatio­n.

“We stand firm in our commitment in providing our usual comprehens­ive and impartial coverage of events around the world,” he said.

Launched in 1996 with financial support from Qatar’s rulers, Al-Jazeera has over the years grown into one of the Middle East’s most influentia­l and controvers­ial media outlets.

It quickly became one of the most widely watched Arabic channels, but it has long drawn the ire of Mideast government­s for airing alternativ­e viewpoints, including hosting Israeli officials.

The network’s critics say the Arabic-language services in particular advance Qatar’s goals by promoting Islamist movements like the Muslim Brotherhoo­d that pose a populist threat to rulers in other Arab countries.

Qatar supported the calls for change resulting from the 2011 Arab Spring protests that led to upheaval in Egypt, Syria and other Middle East nations, and the network intensivel­y covered those protests.

In Egypt, it was seen as sympatheti­c to the Muslim Brotherhoo­d-backed president Mohammed Morsi, who came to power in 2012.

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