The Electronic Intifada
Sunday, June 28, 2015
Netanyahu orders shutdown of TV channel for Palestinians in Israel
Patrick Strickland Rights and Accountability 25 June 2015
Benjamin Netanyahu had demanded the closure of Palestine 48 even before it began broadcasting earlier today.
Mahfouz Abu Turk APA images
Israel plans to shut down a new Arabic-language television station that services Palestinian citizens of Israel.
Yet Israel’s hardline Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has already asked the ministry of communications to shut the station down.
“The
prime minister ordered the ministry to take any and all action within
its purview, both criminal and bureaucratic, to stop the broadcasts,” reports the Israeli news outlet Ynet.
“One of the main elements of the ministry’s investigation will be the
legality of the Palestinian Authority’s funding of the station.”
Israeli efforts to close down the television station, which receives funding from the Palestinian Authority,
are only the latest in a lengthy history of cracking down on
Palestinian media in present-day Israel, the occupied West Bank and
Gaza.
“Daily routine” of persecution
Israeli authorities have made “persecuting Palestinian cultural and media institutions a daily routine,” said Majd Kayyal, the media coordinator at Adalah, a Haifa-based legal center that represents Palestinians in Israel.
“Israeli
authorities either try to cut the funding of these cultural or media
groups or, if not possible, threaten them with immediate closure by
force,” Kayyal told The Electronic Intifada, adding that Israel “tries
to intimidate” any media outlet that “doesn’t heed the political line of
the right-wing ruling class.”
Riad Hassan, the Palestinian Authority’s communications minister has also denounced
Netanyahu’s campaign against Palestine 48. “Neither Netanyahu nor his
radical right-wing government can shut down the station,” he said at a
press conference in the West Bank city of Ramallah.
“The
prime minister will only be able to shut us down if he comes to
Ramallah with his forces and occupies the communications ministry
building and destroys our equipment,” he said, according to the Ynet
report. “We are acting according to law, and are not physically inside
of Israel, but are paying for services of licensed companies.”
The
station will aim to broadcast about the issues important to Palestinian
citizens of Israel, estimated to number 1.7 million people. A diverse
community of Muslims, Christians and Druze, they live in communities across the country and suffer from dozens of discriminatory laws, according to Adalah.
Speaking to +972 Magazine, Sanaa Hammoud, a member of Palestine 48’s advisory board, said Israel is trying “to silence the Arab public.”
“Bloodiest year”
Human
rights groups have consistently documented Israel’s attacks on
Palestinian and international media outlets and press workers.
According
to the Gaza Center for Media Freedom, 2014 was the “bloodiest year”
ever for Palestinians journalists. The Gaza Center documented 295
Israeli press violations in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, and
Gaza last year.
Palestine
48 wouldn’t be the first Palestinian station to be closed down by
force, either. Israeli occupation authorities have tried to shut down
the Ramallah-based Wattan TV several times. The most most recent closure was April 2014.
Back in 2012, Israeli soldiers stormed Wattan TV’s offices and stole computers, transmitters and other broadcasting equipment.
Elsewhere, in occupied East Jerusalem, Israeli forces busted onto Good Morning Jerusalem’s set during the middle of a broadcast and arrested the program director and a cameraman in June 2014.
Later that month, Israeli troops ransacked the offices of PalMedia and the Russian station RT in Ramallah, confiscating and destroying equipment.
Israel’s
crackdowns on media have also been fatal at times. During Israel’s
51-day attack on Palestinians in the besieged Gaza Strip last summer, at
least sixteen press workers were killed and dozens more were injured.
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