Palestinians ban Al-Jazeera over plot allegations

RAMALLAH, West Bank, (Reuters) – The Palestinian  Authority yesterday banned Al-Jazeera television from  operating in its territory and threatened legal action over allegations it broadcast against President Mahmoud Abbas.

The Information Ministry said the Qatar-based Arabic news  channel had spread falsehoods and incited viewers against the  authorities that run the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

The ministry said allegations carried on Al-Jazeera on Tuesday and attributed to a senior figure in Abbas’s Fatah party, Farouq al-Qadoumi, were untrue.

The channel quoted Qadoumi as saying Abbas conspired with  Israel to kill his predecessor Yasser Arafat in 2003. Arafat  died in a Paris hospital in 2004 of an undisclosed ailment.

“Al-Jazeera television has been devoting significant  segments of its broadcasts to incitement against the Palestine  Liberation Organi-sation and the Palestinian National Authority,”  the ministry said in a statement.
“Despite our repeated calls (on Al-Jazeera) to remain  objective when it covers Palestinian affairs and to voice a  balanced position regarding the internal Palestinian situation,  the channel is still inciting,” it said.

In a report on the ban, an Al-Jazeera presenter said the  channel “expressed its astonishment about this decision by the  Palestinian Authority and said it will issue a statement to  answer the accusations of the Palestinian Ministry of  Information”.

Al-Jazeera, the presenter said, was one of several news  operations to report remarks by Qadoumi about an alleged scheme  to kill Arafat. The broadcaster aired a half-hour special on the  allegations.

In response to the ban, al-Jazeera again interviewed  Qadoumi, who insisted the information was authentic and urged  the prosecution of Abbas and other Palestinian officials — a  call that could stoke more internal Fatah disputes.

“I don’t doubt that some would try to bypass this genuine  information rather than considering it and bringing to trial  those who did it so we can tell right from wrong,” he said.

Qadoumi, who has no authority to try Abbas, does not  recognise Palestinian-Israeli interim peace deals nor the  Palestinian Authority which they begat.

Palestinian officials had dismissed as smears Qadoumi’s  accusations. They said he aimed at wrecking unity efforts within  Fatah, which has been plagued by factional divisions.

Qadoumi lives outside the Palestinian territories and has  long been a critic of Abbas.
Three Palestinian plain-clothes security men visited  Al-Jazeera’s bureau in Ramallah yesterday to deliver a  written order to cease work.

“The staff of Al-Jazeera are not allowed to work, not  allowed to broadcast, and crews are not allowed to work in the  field until the judiciary issues its verdict,” said Adnan  Damiri, spokesman for the Palestinian security service.
“We will be monitoring them.”
The Jerusalem-based Foreign Press Association issued a  statement expressing deep concern and urging the Palestinian  Authority to reconsider in line with its stated commitment to  freedom of the press.

Relations between the Palestinian Authority and Al Jazeera  grew tense after Hamas Islamists routed Abbas forces in the Gaza  Strip two years ago. The channel’s correspondents have said that  Abbas aides and security officials were inciting against them.

Palestinian officials accuse the station of siding with  Hamas, allegations Al Jazeera has denied. On occasion, Al  Jazeera correspondents have been banned from Abbas’s office or  ejected from it.