New York, April 3, 2003The
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) is alarmed by state-owned Moroccan
public television's (TVM) decision to bar the satellite television station
Al-Jazeera from using its facilities to feed broadcasts to the station's
headquarters in Doha, Qatar.
Al-Jazeera's correspondent in Morocco, Iqbal Ilhami, told CPJ that on
March 30, she and her crew had completed a report on demonstrations in
the capital, Rabat, opposing the U.S.-led war in Iraq and went to TVM's
facilities to feed the tape to Doha. Ilhami said that when she arrived
at TVM, she was told that there were orders not to allow Al-Jazeera to
use the facilities. Ilhami was not told who gave these orders or why they
were given.
Ilhami contacted Morocco's communications minister, Nabil Bin Abdallah,
who, she said, told her that Al-Jazeera should refrain from transmitting
reports that endangered the general security of Morocco.
Boushra Bourara, a spokeswoman at the Communications Ministry, told CPJ
that the decision not to allow Al-Jazeera to use TVM's facilities had
nothing to do with the station's report on the Rabat demonstrations. Bourara
said that Al-Jazeera was not allowed to use the facilities because the
station had aired two erroneous reports in the weeks since the war began,
in violation of its agreement with TVM.
"If the Communications Ministry believes that Al-Jazeera's reports were
erroneous, it should demand a correction," said CPJ acting director Joel
Simon. "Censorship is not the answer."

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