The Palestinian Authority (PA) has temporarily suspended Al Jazeera's operations in the occupied West Bank over 'inciting material,' according to the news agency Wafa.
A ministerial committee that includes the culture, interior and communications ministries decided to suspend the broadcaster’s operations for what they described as broadcasting “inciting material and reports that were deceiving and stirring strife” in the country, Wafa reported on Wednesday.
Al Jazeera has deplored the Palestinian Authority’s (PA) decision to close its office in the occupied West Bank, calling it a move that is “in line with the [Israeli] occupation’s actions against its staff”.
“Al Jazeera Media Network denounces the Palestinian Authority’s decision to freeze its work and coverage in the West Bank. It considers this decision nothing but an attempt to dissuade the channel from covering the rapidly escalating events taking place in the occupied territories,” the Qatar-based network said in a statement on Thursday.
“And – unfortunately – such a decision comes in line with the previous action taken by the Israeli government, which closed Al Jazeera’s office in Ramallah,” the statement added, calling on the PA to “immediately retract and cancel the decision” and allow its teams to cover freely from the occupied West Bank “without any threats or intimidation”.
“Al Jazeera stresses that this decision will not deter it from its commitment to continue its professional coverage of events and developments in the West Bank,” it noted.
In its statement, Al Jazeera Media Network said that preventing its journalists from conducting their duties is “an attempt to hide the truth about events in the occupied territories, especially what is happening in Jenin and its camps”.
The network added it was “shocked by this decision, which comes at a time when the war on the Gaza Strip is still ongoing, and the systematic targeting and killing of Palestinian journalists by the Israeli occupation forces”.
It stated it holds the PA “fully responsible for the safety and security” of all its employees in the occupied West Bank.
The decision comes after Fatah, the Palestinian faction which dominates the PA, banned Al Jazeera from reporting from the governorate of Jenin in the northern occupied West Bank, citing its coverage of clashes between the Palestinian security forces and Palestinian armed groups in the area.
Fatah in late December had accused the broadcaster of sowing division in “our Arab homeland in general and in Palestine in particular” and encouraged Palestinians not to cooperate with the network.
In response, the network slammed Fatah, saying it had launched an “incitement campaign” against the network and its journalists in the occupied West Bank for its coverage of the clashes.
Mustafa Barghouti, the secretary-general of the Palestinian National Initiative, stated Palestinians would be “astonished at this decision” to suspend Al Jazeera broadcasts.
“I think it’s a big mistake and this decision should be reversed as soon as possible,” Barghouti told Al Jazeera from Ramallah.
“If the PA has an issue with Al Jazeera, it should discuss it,” he added, especially since Al Jazeera has been “exposing the crimes against the Palestinian people … and [has been] promoting the Palestinian cause in general”.
“But more than that, it is an issue of freedom of … the press.”
Israeli forces in September issued Al Jazeera with a military order to shut down operations after they raided the outlet’s bureau in the West Bank city of Ramallah – where the PA is based.
Meanwhile, the PA, which engages in security coordination with Israel, has continued its crackdown in Jenin – a stronghold for armed groups opposing Israel’s occupation.
Several civilians, PA soldiers and armed fighters have been killed since the start of “Operation Protect the Homeland”, including Jenin Brigades commander Yazid Ja’ayseh.
The fighting has focused Palestinian criticism on the PA, with the Popular Resistance Committees umbrella group accusing the organisation of operating “in line with the Zionist agenda”.
An advisor to former Iranian president Hassan Rouhani has criticized member of Iran’s Expediency Council…
An Iranian knowledge-based company has made a significant advancement in disease diagnosis by introducing a…
The US State Department has "informally" notified the Congress of an $8 billion proposed weapons…
China may have talked Russian President Vladimir Putin out of deploying nuclear weapons amid Moscow's…
A member of the Motalefeh Party in Iran has said the country needs to reconsider…
The first private oil dock in South Pars, located in Kangan, southern Iranian province of…