Bahrain suspends Al Jazeera, says flouted press laws

MANAMA, (Reuters) – Bahrain has suspended local  operations of Qatari broadcaster Al Jazeera and barred a crew  from travelling to the Gulf Arab state, accusing the channel of  flouting press rules.  

Al Jazeera, with a record of tense relations with Arab  states over its coverage of sensitive political topics, has  aired programmes on poverty and the treatment of Asian  labourers, both sensitive matters in Bahrain. 

“Bahrain has temporarily frozen the office of the Qatari Al  Jazeera Satellite TV Channel for breaching the professional  media norms and flouting the laws regulating the press and  publishing,” the official Bahrain News Agency said, without  giving details.  

Officials at Bahrain’s Ministry of Information either  declined to comment or could not be reached.  

A spokesman for Qatar-based Al Jazeera declined to comment  on the reasons for the suspension of its Bahraini office.  

The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ)  criticised the ban, noting it came one day after Al Jazeera  aired a programme about poverty in Bahrain.  

“We are dismayed to see Bahrain attempt to muzzle the media  simply because it does not like what is being reported,” Mohamed  Abdel Dayem, CPJ’s Middle East and North Africa programme  coordinator, said in a statement.  

 Observers say the move, while likely sparked by the Al  Jazeera report, may have also reflected tensions between Qatar  and Bahrain that have persisted since the two countries settled  a dispute over the Hawar islands in 2001.