position:information minister

  • Almost famous: Israel recruits D-list celebrities to counter BDS
    Why should the government pay for flights and stays of Hollywood actors in order to combat the boycott movement?
    By Itamar Zohar | Jan. 3, 2017 | 12:30 AM
    http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-1.762642

    If in the next few days you come across social media photos of minor American actors who are in Israel, either at the Western Wall or the Jordan River, you should know that they are the guests of Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan. As part of his roles as information minister and strategic affairs minister, and as part of the cabinet’s efforts to block the campaign calling to boycott Israel, Erdan invited actors Daniel Dae Kim (“Lost” and “Hawaii-Five-O”), Meagan Good (“Deception”), Sonequa Martin-Green and Kenric Green (“The Walking Dead”) and Mark Pellegrino (“Dexter” and “Supernatural”) to Israel.

    You don’t recognize these names? You’re not alone. On their Instagram pages you’ll at least be able to find out what they did here – visit the Western Wall and the Dead Sea, while making sure to stay away from politics. Daniel Dae Kim stressed on Instagram that his visit to Jerusalem was apolitical. Of course it was. But coming on a government-sponsored visit posed no problem for him.

    The visit of this delegation of minor Hollywood actors was the initiative of America’s Voices in Israel, an organization that strives to promote Israel’s image in the United States. It has already sponsored similar visits in the past. It now appears that the government wishes to join this initiative.

    The question is, why should the government pay for flights and stays of Hollywood actors, well-known or less-known, in order to combat the boycott movement? This money could have been used to help people who live here, not for casual visitors who will forget what they saw here by next week.

    Even if, as the official description of their visit contends, “they will document their visit for 50 million of their followers on social media,” their ability to impact anything here is marginal. For them it’s a freebie, an opportunity to collect yet another country’s stamp in their passports while touring it at someone else’s expense.

    Erdan writes that the aim of the visit is “to expose the complex reality of Israel without any biased mediation,” but this is precisely what he’s doing. He’s a cabinet member trying to further its policies. What could be more biased than that? At the end of his announcement he writes “we see great importance in bringing influential people from diverse areas here, in order to show them the truth about Israel. We’re building bridges between Israel and communities around the world in all spheres of life.” (...)

    #BDS

  • Group of 32 countries criticizes Bahrain’s human rights record | Reuters
    http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/09/14/us-bahrain-rights-idUSKCN0RE1L120150914

    The Bahraini government said 17 policeman have been killed and 3,328 wounded since 2011 in bomb attacks or violence it says was stirred up by the opposition.

    The opposition says the government is attempting to stifle free speech by jailing peaceful political dissidents.

    The letter called upon the government “to appropriately address all reports of torture and ill-treatment of detainees and ensure full investigation and prosecution of these cases”.

    It also called on the government to agree to a visit by the U.N. Special Rapporteur on Torture. In 2013, the U.N. torture investigator said Bahrain had in effect canceled a trip he had planned to the Gulf Arab state.

    Information Minister Isa Abdulrahman said that whenever individuals were questioned or imprisoned by the authorities it was due to a violation of the law and had nothing to do with freedom of expression or human rights.

  • Gilad Erdan handed the anti-BDS mantle
    Israeli officials note that while the boycott movement has inflicted little damage so far, it is picking up steam.
    By Ora Coren | Jun. 11, 2015 | Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News
    http://www.haaretz.com/business/.premium-1.660635

    Gilad Erdan, who in addition to being information minister and public security minister is also strategic affairs minister, is creating a unit in the latter ministry to combat foreign efforts to boycott Israel. Erdan has been formally given the green light to handle the issue, as well as a budget, according to diplomatic sources.

    The Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement has increased its public profile recently, notably over the European Union’s move to require origin labeling for products from West Bank Jewish settlements. BDS activists are also leading efforts to get United States colleges and universities to divest from companies that have business ties with Israel, including firms with a presence in West Bank settlements or that do business with the Israel Defense Forces.

    Israeli officials say that while the BDS movement has had only a marginal impact so far, it seems to be gathering support over a feeling in many Western countries that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s new government is unlikely to vigorously pursue peace talks with the Palestinians. If not a present threat, BDS is seen as a potential future strategic threat.

    The boycott has been around in various forms for decades, and in earlier years centered on a refusal in the Arab world to do business with companies that conduct business in Israel. Confronted with the choice of Arab business or the benefit of a presence in a Jewish state that had a small, generally poor population at the time, for some companies the decision was to opt for commerce with the Arab world. That boycott faded by the 1990s, particularly after Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization signed the first Oslo Accords in 1993.

    The newer incarnation of the boycott is the BDS movement, which has also resulted in raucous demonstrations in front of Israeli offices and stores selling merchandise made in the settlements.

    The Europeans have excluded products produced in West Bank settlements, which are outside the sovereign territory of the State of Israel, from liberalized trade provisions that commerce between EU countries and Israel normally enjoy. In addition, the settlement labeling provision is expected to come into force in the coming months so that consumers can identify such products more easily. Nonetheless, a spokesperson in Israel for the European Commission told TheMarker that the EU is officially opposed to boycotts of any kind, including anti-Israeli boycotts.

    The most recent controversy over the prospect of overseas businesses pulling out of Israel came with comments made in Cairo last week by Stephane Richard (see further coverage below), CEO of Orange S.A., the firm that used to be known as France Telecom. He reportedly said that he would pull the use of the Orange brand by Israel cellular service provider Partner Communications “tomorrow” if it wouldn’t cost the company major sums in legal damages. Richard later apologized for any offense caused, and his company explained that he was referring to a corporate decision that the Orange brand not be used by firms that Orange S.A. doesn’t own, rather than any anti-Israel animosity.

    In response to the flap, however, an emergency anti-boycott summit was convened in the American Jewish community by Las Vegas gambling magnate Sheldon Adelson, a major supporter of Republican candidates in the U.S. and the Netanyahu government, and by Israeli-American entertainment mogul Haim Saban, a Democratic party supporter who has a controlling interest in Partner Communications.

    European Jewry has also mobilized. The Europe Israel Press Association is organizing a mission to Israel for about 15 senior business reporters and editors from Britain, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium and Poland, with the aim of making it clear to Europeans what they stand to lose by boycotting Israel.

    Rabbi Menachem Margolin, who founded the EIPA and also serves as director of the European Jewish Association, said that in his opinion anti-Israeli sentiment has long ago been transformed into the new form of anti-Semitism that European Jewry is confronting. In recent years, the advocacy efforts have included dialogue sessions with hundreds of editors, reporters, bloggers and commentators from leading European media outlets. The effort has been funded by European Jews, Margolin said, adding that he thinks the time has come for the Israeli government to provide funding for it. He suggested that the funding be drawn from the defense budget, since he said it affects the security of Europe’s Jews and Israel.

    Economists and business people in Israel are still voicing the opinion that the effects of the boycott have been marginal, involving mostly damage to Israel’s image. Most of the companies making concessions to the boycott are European, along with a few American firms. The high-tech sector seems immune to the pressures – the technology sector here includes global giants such as Google, Facebook, Apple and Intel.

    European companies involved in the infrastructure and defense sectors, however, seem more sensitive to pro-Palestinian campaigning. Someone who was involved in the purchase of training aircraft from Italy for the Israel Air Force in a transaction signed about six months ago recounted: “When we put the transaction together, we were careful not to put British components into the planes because Britain bans the export of military equipment parts that could be used for an attack.”

    The boycott has also affected investment in Israel, as is apparent from the fact that the major global energy companies have not sought to explore for natural gas in Israel’s economic waters. (Instead a consortium that includes a smaller U.S. firm, Noble Energy, has.) Economic sources say the absence of the energy giants is the result of the boycott rather than any Israeli government regulatory policy.

    On the other hand, a Dutch infrastructure company that does business in the Arab world recently submitted a bid to build a new privately-run port in Ashdod, “We haven’t encountered any negative aspect on the part of major Dutch companies operating in Israel,” Henriette Fuchs, an international tax lawyer with the Pearl Cohen law firm, noted this week. “On the contrary, they relate to business with Israel in a very professional manner.”

    The companies know how to split their operations between Israel and the Arab world, she added, so as not to alienate Arab customers.

    On the other hand, Norman Menachem Feder of the Caspi & Co. law firm noted negative political consequences on foreign business transactions after Israel built the West Bank separation barrier, a project that started more than a decade ago, which he said caused some infrastructure firms to leave Israel unexpectedly. But Feder also noted that legislative efforts have been gaining traction in the U.S. to combat the anti-Israel boycott.

    #BDS

  • #Kuwait Arrests Opposition MP for Criticizing Government Two Years Ago
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/kuwait-arrests-opposition-mp-criticizing-government-two-years-ago

    Kuwait authorities arrested a former liberal cabinet minister as he attempted to leave the country Saturday, after being sentenced to a week in jail over an article criticizing the government, his lawyer said. Saad al-Ajmi, information minister between 1999-2000, was detained at the airport as he was leaving for a pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia with his wife and daughter, his lawyer al-Humaidi al-Subaie said on Twitter. read more

    #freedom_of_speech #Human_Rights #Kuwait_Emir #Kuwaiti_opposition

  • Kuwait jails former information minister Saad Bin Teflah | GulfNews.com
    http://gulfnews.com/news/gulf/kuwait/kuwait-jails-former-information-minister-saad-bin-teflah-1.1439233

    Airport police in Kuwait on Saturday arrested former information minister Saad Bin Teflah as he was about to fly to Makkah with his wife and daughter to perform Umrah, his lawyer has said.

    The arrest was based on a one-week jail sentence pronounced by the court on Thursday in a case brought by Finance Minister Anas Al Saleh against the former minister, the lawyer added.

    “The court case was not publicised even though the address of my client is well known,” Al Hamidi Al Sabii, the lawyer, said. “The case was over an article published on Al Aan news site, and the judges sentenced him and Al Aan editor Zayed Al Zaid to one week in prison. My client was not notified about the trial date even though his home address and his work location at the University of Kuwait are well known, especially that he is a prominent Kuwaiti, Gulf and Arab figure. My client was detained at the airport,” he said, quoted by local media.

    The lawyer added that he would appeal against the sentence on Sunday, when courts re-open following the two-day weekend.

  • Egypte : Sissi annonce « la défaite des islamistes » aux élections législatives de 2015 - Egypt independant

    http://www.egyptindependent.com/news/sisi-islamists-won-t-win-parliament-elections

    President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi has ruled out an Islamist win during the anticipated parliament elections which he promised to run before the end of March 2015.
     
    “My bit is on the awareness of Egyptians during the next elections”, he was quoted by former Kuwaiti information minister Sami al-Nisf, who spoke to Al-Masry Al-Youm following Sisi’s meeting with a delegation of Kuwaiti media figures and businessmen.
     
    “Nobody can buy Egyptians’ votes,” Sisi was quoted as replying to his guests, who voiced fears that “dishonest” tactics would be used to lure voters during the polls.
     
    Islamists dominated a majority of the People’s Assembly under the formerly-ruling Supreme Council of the Armed Forces in 2012 before the Supreme Constitutional Court dissolved it in June of the same year.
     
    Parliamentary elections were scheduled to be held before the end of 2014 based on the roadmap that was declared following the ouster of Mohamed Morsy. But the delay in adopting the law on constituencies disabled the government from setting a timetable for the vote.
     
    The delay has provoked government opponents who see it as a violation of the roadmap.

    Sur @OrientXXI Une stratégie d’élimination des Frères musulmans http://orientxxi.info/magazine/egypte-une-strategie-d-elimination,0362

  • Syrian government rejects transitional body: minister
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/syrian-government-rejects-transitional-body-minister

    The Syrian government reiterated its rejection on Saturday of a proposal to form a transitional ruling body as part of a political solution to the country’s nearly three-year conflict. “We have complete reservations regarding it,” Information Minister Omran Zoabi told reporters shortly before the government was due to hold its first talks with an opposition delegation in Geneva, in the presence of international mediator Lakhdar Brahimi. read more

    #Geneva_II #peace_talks #syria #Top_News

  • Syrian minister says Assad will lead any post-Geneva II transition
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/syrian-minister-says-assad-will-lead-any-post-geneva-ii-transitio

    Syria’s Bashar al-Assad will remain president and lead any transition agreed upon in Geneva peace talks planned for next month, a government minister insisted on Wednesday. “If anyone thinks we are going to #Geneva_II to hand the keys to Damascus over (to the opposition), they might as well not go,” Information Minister Omran al-Zohbi said in remarks carried by the official SANA news agency. “The decision rests with President Assad. He will lead the period of transition, if there is one. He is the leader of #syria... And he will remain the president of Syria.” read more

    #Top_News

  • #Jordan applies for #UNSC seat rejected by #Saudi_Arabia
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/jordan-applies-unsc-seat-rejected-saudi-arabia

    Jordan has applied for a two-year term on the UN Security Council, the information minister said on Monday, after Saudi Arabia won a seat and then turned it down. “Jordan has officially applied for a non-permanent seat on the UN security Council. The kingdom is interested in this seat and realizes its political and diplomatic responsiblities,” Mohammed Momonai told AFP. "The country hopes to receive international support for this application, which comes as a result of Jordan’s balanced and (...)

    #News

  • #Anonymous hacks Jordanian PM site over #price_hikes
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/anonymous-hacks-jordanian-pm-site-over-price-hikes

    Hackers have attacked the official website of the Jordanian prime minister’s office, the information minister said on Sunday, in a protest over rising prices. “We have restored the website after it was hacked last night for several hours,” Mohammad Momani told AFP, claiming to have identified the activists behind the disruption and promising “legal action” against them. “Anonymous #Jordan,” who said they were members of the global hacktivist group Anonymous, defaced the website and left a (...)

    #austerity #Top_News

  • Channel to bring the best out of Saudi women
    Arab News - 22 July, 2013

    Come Thursday, Saudi Arabia will be boasting of having an exclusive satellite channel for women which will not only serve as a platform for Saudi women to showcase their talent and capabilities but also help clear misconceptions about Arab women abroad.

    Abdullah Al-Nazawi, the board chairman, launched the channel on Saturday in the presence of Information Minister Abdul Aziz Khoja and Riyaz bin Kamal, president of the General Authority to regulate the audio-visual media.

    http://gitm.kcorp.net/index.php?id=657632

  • Qatar in the Horn of Africa: What Is an Expensive, Idyllic Resort Doing in Eritrea?

    “Qatar is the only country today that has the means and the will to influence Eritrea,” says Leonard Vincent, a French journalist whose work focuses on Eritrea, and who broke the news that Eritrean information minister Ali Abdu defected in December 2012. “They want to use this for their own benefit in terms of their position in the international community, and to secure the Arab world’s influence on the Red Sea. It’s part of their political game.”

    Qatar mediated a border dispute between Eritrea and neighboring Djibouti, launching an effort that culminated in an agreement signed in June 2010 and initially held in place by a small detachment of Qatari peacekeepers. “The fact that they have managed to put Djibouti and Eritrea together at the same table to stop another border war...proves that Qatar can talk to Eritrea,” says Vincent.

    Yet Qatar’s success in tempering the ever-recalcitrant Afewerki came at the expense of the country’s relationship with Ethiopia, which cut off diplomatic relations with Qatar in April of 2008 on the suspicion that the emirate was aiding Eritrean meddling in Somalia. At the same time, the Djibouti agreement demonstrated the benefits of Qatari engagement. In essence, Qatar had achieved a western diplomatic objective — namely, lowering the collective temperature in the Horn of Africa — by fostering the kind of close relationship with Afewerki that a European country or the United States would have had difficulty getting away with.

    according to a 2011 report of the U.N.’s Somalia-Eritrea monitoring group:

    Qatar is perhaps Eritrea’s most important economic partner at the moment, and Qatari officials have acknowledged to numerous foreign diplomats that their Government has provided significant, direct financial support to the Government in Asmara. According to numerous interviews conducted by the Monitoring Group with diplomats, former Eritrean officials and businessmen, much of this support is provided in the form of cash.

    [...]
    The resort on Dahlak Kebir is a reminder of Qatar’s ambition to succeed where the international community had failed — to pacify and open up Eritrea, even if it meant subsidizing one of the most oppressive and arbitrary governments in Africa. But the rest of Dahlak Kebir serves as a reality check. The resort is an anomaly in an island chain more widely known for its prison camp and spy intrigues. It’s a $50 million novelty, evidence of a strategically and even morally-misguided policy, rather than a testament to Qatar’s newfound diplomatic or economic power. In a blistering rebuttal to Qatar’s efforts at being a major player in the Horn of Africa, Dahlak Kebir won’t be on anyone’s vacation itinerary any time soon — unless you’re Qatari royalty, that is.

    The Atlantic
    http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2013/03/what-is-an-expensive-idyllic-resort-doing-in-eritrea/274424

  • Syria condemns rebels’ ’chemical weapon attack’ – video | World news | guardian.co.uk
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/video/2013/mar/19/syria-rebels-chemical-video

    Syria’s information minister, Omran al-Zoabi, says Syrian rebels fired rockets containing chemical agents on Tuesday. He says the attack breaches international law, and says President Bashar al-Assad’s forces would never use chemical weapons. The pro-opposition Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says at least 26 people died in the attack near Aleppo, but the use of chemical weapons has not been confirmed

  • L’info qui a circulé aujourd’hui : Samaha serait revenu sur ses confessions, prétendant qu’il avait avoué sous la contrainte. Mais selon le Daily Star, cette information serait fausse :
    http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Politics/2012/Aug-14/184654-reports-of-samaha-recanting-confession-baseless-sources.ashx

    Lebanese judicial sources denied Tuesday local media reports that former Information Minister Michel Samaha had recanted the confession he made during police interrogation.

    “If reports that Samaha withdrew his earlier statements are true, therefore the military judge would have been convinced and Samaha would have been released,” one source told The Daily Star.

    “But the mere fact that the arrest warrant is still in place for Samaha is proof that the reports are baseless,” the source added.

    En même temps, la logique de cette « source judiciaire » est totalement farfelue : selon elle, si Samah s’était rétracté, le juge aurait été obligé de le libérer ? Ça n’a aucun sens.

    La suite de l’article est plus intéressante : la version d’Al Manar (chaîne du Hezbollah, pro-syrien) :

    Al-Manar said Samaha had confessed to transferring explosives from Syria to Lebanon with the aim of using them to prevent opponents of the Syrian regime from smuggling militants and weapons through Lebanon’s northern border, rather than to carry out a plot to destabilize the country.

    Et selon Marada (également pro-syrien) :

    Marada movement leader MP Sleiman Franjieh said Monday Samaha had confessed to attempting to target the Free Syrian Army and the routes to smuggle arms from Lebanon to Syria, adding that his confessions were manipulated by the Information Branch for political reasons.

    Youssef Finyanous, one of Samaha’s lawyers, is a Marada movement member and Franjieh’s personal lawyer.

    et enfin, ça va jaser :

    Kfouri, who sources identified as having provided incriminating footage in the Samaha case, was reportedly flown outside the country just before the police raids on Samaha’s residences in Ashrafieh, Beirut, and Metn’s Khanshara-Jwar, for fear over his safety.

  • Une autre réaction d’un député Hezbollah à l’arrestation de Samaha :
    http://www.yalibnan.com/2012/08/12/hezbollah-mp-samahas-arrest-targeting-syrian-leadership

    Hezbollah MP Walid Succariyeh said Sunday that the arrest of former Information Minister Michel Samaha is aimed at targeting the Syrian leadership.

    “The target Michel Samaha’s arrest operation is the Syrian leadership, due his ties with prominent Syrian officials , including Syrian President Bashar al-Assad,” National News Agency quoted Succariyeh as saying.
    He also said that there could be attempts to blame the Syrian regime for the alleged bombing plot that Samaha is accused of facilitating, but added: “ I do not blame or acquit anyone . We are still waiting for the facts to be revealed.”

  • Février 2010 : Tarik Mitri, ministre de l’information du Liban, explique (enfin) aux Américains cette évidence : leurs pressions sur leurs alliés arabes pour censurer Al Manar des satellites TV sont contreproductives. Pourquoi ? Parce que ça les ferait passer pour des... censeurs.

    03.02.2010 : INFORMATION MINISTER PRESSURED TO ATTACK ANTI-HIZBALLAH HR 2278 - Nyheter - Wikileaks - Aftenposten.no
    http://www.aftenposten.no/spesial/wikileaksdokumenter/article4025513.ece

    Mitri said that most ministers felt that proposed legislation such as HR 2278 would “make their lives more difficult,” giving radicals another weapon in their arsenal to radicalize others. He offered that all of the ministers needed to be seen as defending the freedom of their satellite companies even though, as Mitri opined, “the content of these broadcasts do more harm here than in the United States.” Mitri said that both Arabsat and Nilesat, the two main satellite providers in the Arab world, felt that they could not be held responsible for the content of the broadcasts on the channels they transmit. After all, said Mitri, “if they are licensed in their home countries, it’s not (the satellite companies’) problem.”

    #Liban #Hezbollah #Al_Manar #cablegate

  • Septembre 2008, rencontre peu intéressante avec Tarik Mitri, ministre de l’information du Liban. Je relève juste ce paragraphe vers la fin de la rencontre.

    18.09.2008 : LEBANON : INFORMATION MINISTER SAYS "MUTUAL SUSPICION AND MISTRUST" COULD DELAY ELECTIONS - Nyheter - Wikileaks - Aftenposten.no
    http://www.aftenposten.no/spesial/wikileaksdokumenter/article4025304.ece

    When asked if Hizballah’s Al-Manar network would respect such a code, Mitri said “probably.” He said Al-Manar was not the worst of the networks, rather it was the new pro-Syrian, opposition network, Al-Jadeed. Mitri characterized Al-Jadeed as “having a taste for the sensational and sarcastic” that was causing more problems, Mitri opined.

    #Liban #Hezbollah #al_Manar #Al_Jadeed #New_TV #cablegate

  • Le grotesque n’est (jamais) un obstacle : lors de cette rencontre du 7 décembre 2005, le ministre de l’information koweitien explique à l’ambassadeur américain qu’il est très content de sa nouvelle loi vers plus de liberté de la presse. Avec un esprit d’à-propos qui frise le génie, l’ambassadeur lui répond en lui demandant la censure de la chaîne de télévision Al-Manar du satellite ArabSat.

    Ensuite, à l’ambassade, ils titrent ce rapport « Freedom Agenda »...

    12.12.2005 : FREEDOM AGENDA : KUWAITI INFORMATION MINISTER - Nyheter - Wikileaks - Aftenposten.no
    http://www.aftenposten.no/spesial/wikileaksdokumenter/article4025268.ece

    During a December 7 meeting, Minister of Information Dr. Anas Al-Rasheed told the Ambassador that he was very pleased by the progress of the revised press law and he believes it has a very good chance of being approved by the National Assembly in the near future. Al-Rasheed said that PM Shaykh Sabah had been key to pushing the bill through the Council of Ministers in an acceptable form. The Ambassador used the occasion to request elimination of Al-Manar from ARABSAT.

    #Al_Manar #Hezbollah #Koweit #Arabsat #Liban #cablegate

  • Juillet 2005, pressions économiques sur l’Égypte pour autoriser l’installation d’un émetteur pour Radio Sawa, la radio de propagande américaine en arabe.

    19.07.2005 : VISIT OF NEA ASSISTANT SECRETARY WELCH TO CAIRO JULY 16, 2005 - Nyheter - Wikileaks - Aftenposten.no
    http://www.aftenposten.no/spesial/wikileaksdokumenter/article4025246.ece

    In a July 16 meeting, NEA Assistant Secretary David Welch asked Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit to agree to the installation of a FM transmitter in Egypt to facilitate Radio Sawa broadcasts. Until this is done, A/S Welch underscored, $227 million in ESF money will not be released. He further asked that GOE officials agree to meet with members of the Broadcasting Board of Governors here in Egypt to approve the transmitter proposal as soon as possible. By way of background, A/S Welch reminded Aboul Gheit that this issue has been pending since 2001 and that he had discussed the matter personally with successive Ministers of Information during his tenure as U.S. Ambassador to Egypt. Although AM transmitters may cause disruption to Egyptian broadcasting, an FM transmitter would not, A/S Welch explained.

    #Égypte #cablegate #radio

    • 26.07.2005: CHARGE DISCUSSES RADIO SAWA AND FOREIGN CORRESPONDENTS´ ACCESS WITH INFORMATION MINISTER EL FEKKI - Nyheter - Wikileaks - Aftenposten.no
      http://www.aftenposten.no/spesial/wikileaksdokumenter/article4025250.ece

      Charge and PAC met with Information Minister Anas Al Fekki on July 26 to urge that GOE allow Radio Sawa to create a broadcast facility in Egypt and to relay the complaint from foreign correspondents stationed here that they lack on-the-record access to GOE officials. The Minister agreed to meet with Broadcasting Board of Governors´ (BBG) representatives to explain his plan for revising the law that prohibits non-government ownership of broadcasting and thus to enable Sawa to broadcast within Egypt. But he firmly rejected linking Sawa with aid to Egypt, saying that the GOE would rather forfeit the aid than look like it was leapfrogging the law in response to U.S. pressure. Such an approach, he said, would badly damage the public image of the U.S.-Egyptian partnership and destroy any chance of getting a broadcast facility for Sawa. Portraying himself as a liberal reformer who favors a free media climate, the Minister pointed to sweeping changes in the Information Ministry, which controls the pervasive state TV and radio. He highlighted the real-time and unfettered coverage by Egyptian TV of the Sharm el Sheikh bombings and his own efforts to ensure free and balanced access by all Presidential candidates to the broadcast media. End Summary.

    • 11.08.2005: BBG REPRESENTATIVES DISCUSS RADIO SAWA WITH INFORMATION MINISTER EL FEKKI - Nyheter - Wikileaks - Aftenposten.no
      http://www.aftenposten.no/spesial/wikileaksdokumenter/article4025254.ece

      During their meeting with Information Minister El Fekki and other broadcast officials, the Broadcasting Board of Governors (BBG) team headed by Executive Director Brian Conniff found no Egyptian willingness to find a quick solution that will enable Radio SAWA to build a broadcast tower in Egypt. In contrast to a more upbeat-sounding approach in his July 26 discussion with the Charge and PAO (reftel), the Minister — as BBG Director Conniff put it — seemed “unconcerned” by the prospect of $227 million being withheld from Egypt´s ESF if there is no progress towards a local SAWA FM broadcast. Both the Minister and his Deputy, whom the BBG group met later, stressed that a total overhaul of Broadcasting Law 13 is the only way forward for SAWA or any other non-GOE broadcasters. They admit that this process, which must wait for the November parliamentary elections and the subsequent legislative process, could take three to five years. Executive Director Conniff made his disappointment clear to the Minister and his Deputy and informed them that he would have to report this response to staffers working on the appropriations bill. If Egypt had to pay $227 million to uphold the integrity of its legal processes, so be it, was the Minister´s response.