Controversies and criticism
Al Arabiya has been the topic of controversy. It has been criticized as an arm of Saudi foreign policy.[42][43]
On 14 February 2005, Al Arabiya was the first news satellite channel to air news of the assassination of Rafik Hariri.[44] In September 2008, Iran expelled Al Arabiya's Tehran bureau chief Hassan Fahs, the third Al Arabiya correspondent expelled from Iran since the network opened an Iran office.[45] In October of the same year, the Al Arabiya website was hacked by attackers who claimed to be Shi'ites.[46]
In 2009, Courtney C. Radsch lost her job the day after publishing an article about safety problems on the airline Emirates, a move Al Arabiya described as restructuring in the English department.[47] In June 2009, the Iranian government ordered the Al Arabiya office in Tehran to be closed for a week for "unfair reporting" of the Iranian presidential election. Seven days later, amid the 2009 Iranian presidential election, the network's office was "closed indefinitely" by the government.[48]
In 2016, Al Arabiya dismissed 50 staff members, including journalists. Citing financial problems stemming from low oil prices, the dismissed individuals were offered salaries and benefits for six months as a severance package.[49]
In April 2017, Al Arabiya was found in breach of UK broadcasting law by the UK media regulator, Ofcom, for broadcasting an interview with an imprisoned Bahraini torture survivor. Ofcom concluded that it infringed on the privacy of imprisoned Bahraini opposition leader and torture survivor Hassan Mushaima, when it broadcast footage of him obtained during his arbitrary detention in Bahrain.[50] Ofcom sanctioned the licence holder Al Arabiya News Channel FZ-LLC by fining them GB£120000 and directing them to broadcast an on-air apology.[51][52][53] The channel then surrendered its license to broadcast in the following month after an additional complaint was filed by Qatar News Agency.[54][55]
Arab criticism
In November 2004, the interim Iraqi government banned Al Arabiya from reporting from the country after it broadcast an audio tape reportedly made by the deposed Iraqi President Saddam Hussein.[8] Two years later, the Iraqi government also banned the channel for one month for "imprecise coverage". According to the station itself, Al Arabiya journalists and staff have come under constant pressure from Iraqi officials to allegedly "report stories as dictated to" and in 2014, Iraqi PM Nouri Maliki threatened again to ban Al Arabiya in Iraq, shut down its offices and websites. For his part, Al Arabiya's General Manager at the time, Abdulrahman al-Rashed, vowed in a statement that the news channel and its sister channel al-Hadath will continue reporting the story in Iraq despite "Maliki's threats" as well as other threats from the likes of ISIS.[56]
Due to post-coverage of assassination of Rafic Hariri, as of 2007, Syrian politicians have criticized Al Arabiya for anti-government and perceived pro-US and pro-Israeli bias.[57]
In 2013, Saudi Islamic scholar Abdulaziz al-Tarefe criticized the channel in a viral tweet.[58]