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Article No. 10
News Television
in the Arabian Gulf …
Period of Transitions
Joe Khalil
Southern Illinois
University Carbondale
ABSTRACT
Television news in
the GCC (Gulf Cooperation Council) is undergoing three transitional
currents. First, the Arab 24-hour news channels, Al Jazeera and Al
Arabiya, are re-inventing themselves. The first is developing a
raison d'étre in line with its newly realized 'global' image
while the second is answering the changes in a dynamic rich business
oriented society. Second, government channels are undergoing an
extreme make over. Television stations in Dubai, Bahrain, Oman and
Saudi Arabia are radically changing their look and feel. Third,
broadcasting regulations, at least in Kuwait and the UAE, have
allowed the birth of various channels dedicated to news and
business. This paper attempts to answer the following questions: Are
these changes merely cosmetic, affecting design and graphics? Is the
legal change echoing a political stance or diffusing a social
unrest? Are the changes the latest fad in a society of interrelated
cultural and tribal codes? Using a combination of historical,
political economy research and participant observation, this paper
describes these shifts, analyzes their processes, and interprets
their implications on the regional and international media
landscape.
Introduction
The Arabian Gulf’s
broadcasting industries are undergoing a period of tumultuous and
unparalleled change. Various layers of closely interwoven
transitions ranging from political ‘opening’ to economic boom, from
the emergence of internal security concerns to the advocacy of the
right to know, are combining to direct this Gulf-based media through
its moving sands.
Whenever transitions
are discussed in professional circles, it is inevitably coupled with
a set of adjectives so overused as to have become clichés. It is
almost always ‘slow’, ‘gradual’ and ‘discontinuous’. These default
descriptions have become so proverbial that they have virtually lost
their meaning. When applied to the Gulf television news industries,
the adjectives are met with their antonyms ‘fast’, ‘rapid’ and
‘unexpected’. These descriptions reveal the nature of these
transitions, elusive like a desert mirage and uncertain like its
sands. Nevertheless, transitions mean that strategic directions are
inevitable. The questions explored in this paper revolve around the
nature of transitions that are shaping television news in the
Arabian Gulf? What is the nature and extent of these transitions
from three primary angles: pan Arab news channels, national Gulf
channels, and the regulatory framework for news operation in the
region?
In this paper, the Arabian Gulf refers
to the six states that form the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), an
organization whose members are Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates,
Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar and Oman.[i]
Newly formed Kingdoms, Emirates, Sultanate or states were eager to
assert their independence and sense of nationhood. Traditionally,
GCC broadcasters are government-owned and concerned with the image
of the statehood; most often equated with that of its ruler, a
monarch. This translated in a policy where the ruler’s image and
achievements took priority over any other programming policy. Rulers
are constantly praised, their image regularly screened and most
often associated with any signs of development such as airports,
highways and oil refineries.[ii]
In the early 1990’s,
the introduction of commercial satellite receivers spearheaded a
movement of competition between local and transnational satellite
broadcasters. While penetration of receivers was slowed by various
bureaucratic and legal procedures, the 1991 Gulf War uncovered the
extent of satellite unofficial penetration and the GCC countries
needed to adopt and adapt this new technology to maintain an eroding
audience. For instance, by establishing the Middle East Broadcasting
Center (MBC) in London, Saudi Arabia pioneered private pan Arab
satellite broadcasting in the 1991. In less than a decade,
transnational satellite broadcasting became the main source of
entertainment and information. The growth of satellite channels
challenged the national stations on the basis of their popularity,
funding and growth. National stations could not assume access to
every single household. Similarly, their over reliance on state
funding put their audience accountability under further scrutiny. In
the Gulf where rulers are personally involved in the programming and
financing of the stations, this absence of core audiences was reason
for diminishing funding. While these factors play a driving force in
the changing media scene in the Gulf region, other contributing
factors made this change inevitable.
In this paper, the
media landscape is analyzed against a backdrop characterized by a
liberalization of political leadership, intricate security concerns
and an unprecedented economic expansion. Of course, any type of
empirical research into phenomenon needs to be conducted from a
specific perspective; a theoretical ‘lens’ must be adopted through
which the objects under scrutiny can be observed. This work benefits
from the author’s participant observation and personal contacts in
newsrooms across the region. Inspired by political economy, these
transitions conform to spatialization as an entry point. The
structures, typically news businesses and policies, are overcoming
the constraints of space and time. In this process, these changes
are transforming our understanding of what is global, historic and
irrevocable. Factors of politics, security and economy set the
stage for the discussion of the undergoing transitions in the Gulf
news industry. These factors contextualize a broader social reality
that news refracts.
Factors of
Politics, Security and Economy
While this paper is
not concerned with an evaluation of the political situation in the
Gulf region; however, it is important to highlight the transitions
that are conducive to a new media environment. There transitions are
threefold: increased citizen participation, the emergence of a new
leadership and transition of power.
There is ample
evidence about an emergence of a democratic dialogue in each of the
GCC countries. For instance, parliaments in Kuwait and Bahrain have
been sites for serious dialogue concerning the media. At the time of
writing, both Kuwait and Bahrain are debating new press laws.
Similarly, other countries have taken steps to increase
participation of social constituents in the decision making process.
In fact, the largest country in the Gulf, Saudi Arabia, has held
municipal elections and developed arenas for dialogue on some of the
controversial issues such as women and minority rights.
In spite of the
differences in the definition of the political system in each
country, the GCC countries share a common understanding of
leadership based on a monarchy and tribal relations.
As the rulers were
aging, the transition of power became a serious issue both on the
national, regional and international level. The objective is what
newspapers refer to as “smooth transition of power” – a recurring
headline. The main concern is a continuity maintained only through
the ascent to power of a well trained heir. During the past two
years, new rulers appeared in the United Arab Emirates (2004), Saudi
Arabia (2005) and Kuwait (2006). In the case of UAE, the current
president Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan has been in positions of
governance since 1982, while King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia has
served as de facto regent since 1985.
As a result, the GCC is emerging as a
society leading a ‘managed change’.[iii]
Media, particularly news, is one facet where a new group of leaders
are administering this change. The cases of Qatar and the UAE stand
out in this regard. On June 27, 1995, the Deputy Ruler of Qatar,
Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa, deposed his father Emir Khalifa in a
bloodless coup. Later, Emir Hamad and his father reconciled in 1996;
the same year that he established Al Jazeera television. This
political transition gave birth to a global medium that has changed
the media landscape not in the Arabian Gulf but in the world. A
later part of this paper will be dedicated to this “little match box
which makes all the noise”
[iv]
Deputy ruler of Dubai, UAE, Sheikh
Mohammed Bin Rached Al Maktoum is another breed of Gulf leaders who
believe that “there is no quicker path to comprehensive development
than cooperation in the fields of IT and communication”.[v]
Consequently, the establishment of an internet and media free zone
provided much needed infrastructure to attract, support and maintain
a news industry in the region. The case of Dubai’s media city will
be detailed in this paper for its regulatory innovation as a hub for
Pan Arab and international media.
There is a direct relationship between
secure borders and a flourishing media. Internal or external threats
challenge freedom of expression and communication development. Media
starts to serve political interests and is rarely left independent.
The last three decades witnessed three major wars that threatened
the security and the stability in the Gulf.[vi]
The northern borders of the region came under various threats: the
export of the Islamic revolution during the eighties and Saddam’s
invasion of Kuwait in the early nineties. In spite of the current
war in Iraq, the northern borders, particularly, neighboring Saudi
Arabia and Kuwaiti borders have come under no direct threat. Since
the mid nineties, The Kingdom of Bahrain has accommodated the Shiaa
Islamic requests while Yemen has been reunified; the eastern and
southern borders are stable. With a large military presence, the
region enjoys an American security umbrella. Yet, there has been a
discovery of an ‘enemy within’ the borders. This has been true in
the case of Kuwait, Yemen, Qatar, and especially Saudi Arabia. Since
the end of Desert Storm in 1991, Saudi Arabia has become a primary
target of terrorist actions and recruitment. The US military
presence in the Kingdom, the domestic demand for political and
economic reforms added to unemployment are some of the proclaimed
root causes of these terrorist operations. International pressures
as a result of the events of 9/11 and the subsequent American
occupation of Iraq has heightened tensions in the Kingdom. The
relationship between news media policies and the ‘enemy within’ will
be discussed later.
The economies of the GCC countries have
witnessed a tremendous growth in a post September 11, 2001,
environment. In 2006, the economic boom in the GCC is set to enter
its fourth year due primarily to high oil prices. New studies by the
Washington-based Institute for International Finance (IIF) and the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) the group’s GDP is expected to
reach $600 billion.[vii]
Therefore, it is important to highlight some of those growth areas
which have a direct impact on the changes taking place in television
news industry.
The first factor is
related to a change in the investment ‘mentality’ whereby a large
portion of GCC foreign investments was repatriated. Familiar to more
westernized business culture, those Gulf investors requested
structures to support their investments; for example, Bahrain
introduced its Financial Harbor while UAE established Dubai
International Financial Center (DIFC). These structures are also
coupled by an interest in diffusing and receiving information.
Perhaps the introduction of a franchise of CNBC in Arabic is a solid
example of that interest. At the time of writing this paper, three
other regional Gulf-based business channels are under preparation.
As detailed later in this paper, the major transition in Al Arabiya
is closely related to the need for business news.
This economic boom
has impacted various sectors; primarily real estate and retail. The
first has recorded milestone changes to accommodate various
investments. It is only during the last three years that foreign
ownership of residential units has been permitted in UAE, Bahrain,
Qatar and Oman. In an effort to attract both foreign as well as Arab
tourists, these countries have encouraged the building and sale of
units on artificial islands. Perhaps the magnitude of these projects
can be best illustrated by the Palm project, a series of man made
islands in the shape of this Arab tree that can be seen from the
moon. Similarly, Saudi Arabia has engaged in extensive efforts to
promote religious tourism and, to that end, has devised time share
investments in compliance with Islamic law. The need to receive
information about tourism and real estate has prompted the opening
of at least two channels, Al Iqariat and Mishkat specifically, to
serve this audience niche. While their programming is more
promotional than news, yet, they do offer various information
oriented programs.
Additionally, the retail sector has also
witnessed some growth as Gulf citizens and expatriates look for ways
to use their disposable income. Shopping malls, leisure and
entertainment facilities have become an essential part of the Gulf
lifestyle. In the past five years, the UAE, Bahrain and Oman have
taken various steps to increase the experiences of their residence.
Pioneered by Dubai in 1995, shopping festivals became a yearly event
in most of the Gulf countries. Usually, these are month long
televised activities including entertainment acts and attractions.
This interest in lifestyle left its mark on the television industry
with the establishment of specific channels such as Citrus TV, whose
mission is lifestyle news and information; or Sema Dubai which acts
as the emirate’s promotional channel. Just consider the advertising
figures of 2005; more money is spent advertising real estate in the
UAE and Saudi Arabia than any other market sector US$89.2 million
was spent in the UAE compared with US$54.4 million in Saudi Arabia.[viii]
This puts real estate ahead of evergreen advertising categories such
as cars and banking. This background of economic boom and need for
various types of information serves as one angle for examining the
transitions taking place in the news industry.
Gulf Based Satellite
News Channels: Al Jazeera and Al Arabiya
The satellite boom
of this decade has triggered the establishment of various Gulf based
news channels. From the international franchise of CNBC focusing on
business news to the Kuwaiti-funded, UAE based El Iqariat (the real
estate channel), a number of satellite channels are worthy of
analysis. This paper is concerned with the two pan Arab television
news leaders: Al Jazeera and Al Arabiya. With their 24-hour news
format, both channels account for more than 50% of Saudi viewership,
the largest population in the region. Analysis of the channels’
mission statements and public discourse sets the stage for a
thorough analysis of their ‘transitions’.
In the aftermath of
9/11, the Arab media particularly Al Jazeera has been under
increased scrutiny. At least six books directly dealt with the birth
and growth of Al Jazeera, while many articles tried to decipher its
mission, describe its audience and (dis)-credit its claims. As noted
earlier, the channel started broadcasting in late 1996. In a way,
Qatar became the patron of a dissolved venture between the BBC and
Saudi owned Orbit satellite platform. Broadcasting for almost two
years until April 1996, the BBC Arabic version contributed
indirectly to the establishment of Al Jazeera. Logistically, it
trained Arab journalists in the traditions of television news,
teaching them the language of ‘exciting’ television unavailable,
until then, in the Arab world. At the same time, the computer
software and organizational aspects of mounting a pan Arab news
satellite channel were designed and tested. In a word, a channel was
ready for relocation; Qatar’s new approach to information and media
provided an ideal spot for the start of the channel. Benefiting from
a US$150 million grant from the Emir of Qatar, Al Jazeera started
spreading its mission across the region.
With their motto
‘the opinion and the other opinion’, Al Jazeera tried to live up to
its patron’s acknowledgement that “some discomfort for government
officials is a small price to pay for this new freedom.” But Al
Jazeera started causing more than just discomfort. ‘From the ocean
to the Gulf’, as its promotion claims, an audio-visual ripple effect
began capturing an audience already hooked to satellite dishes, each
new crisis in the region increased the channel’s dominance on the
news sector. Over the past five years, the channel grew from a
regional channel to a global news source.
Regionally, the
channel witnessed the second Palestinian uprising, which erupted in
September 2000, and covered the Israeli invasion of Palestinian
towns and refugee camps in Spring 2002. The suicide atrocities of 9/11
triggered U.S. air strikes on Afghanistan. Al Jazeera again found
itself in the limelight. With positions on both ends of the
struggle, Al Jazeera was able to give an account of life under
Taliban. Regardless of the criticism against its broadcasts, the
pictures and the sounds of its reporters were re-transmitted
internationally. The war in Iraq in 2003 brought several challenges
to the channel. Internally, Al Jazeera was competing against its own
bias, news standards and ethical dilemmas. This time war was on the
Arab world, but unlike the Palestinian case, the Arabs were divided.
Perhaps the removal of Jassem El Ali for alleged conspiracy with the
Iraqi regimes tells some aspect of these internal challenges.
Politically, the channel had to maintain its independence while
carefully managing the politics of access dictated by the various
parties: the coalition forces, the Iraqi regime, the Kuwaitis and
the Jordanians. On the Arab scene, Al Jazeera had to compete for the
hearts and minds of the Arabs. The war has intensified competition
with Al Arabiya, at the time a new 24 hour news channel. But also Al
Jazeera was competing against a number of channels dedicated to
covering the war primarily, Abu Dhabi TV and LBC Sat. While the
performance of Al Jazeera during the recent war in Iraq warrants
further study, it has managed to emerge as a global news source.
Almost ten years after its
establishment, Al Jazeera is undergoing various transitions on two
main levels. First, the channel has become an international brand.
Initially, it was concerned with pushing the envelope of traditional
Arabic news coverage. At the forefront were the Palestinian uprising
and the prospects of peace. Later, the channel positioned itself on
an Islamic agenda as it became Bin Laden’s preferred, perhaps only,
media outlet. It carried his message to the Arab world and relayed
it to international broadcasters. With the Iraqi war coverage, Al
Jazeera emerged as the fifth most influential global brand behind
Apple Computer, Google, Ikea and Starbucks.[ix]
This global brand
recognition required two specific transitions related to content and
form. The content now is supervised by an Al Jazeera veteran,
Palestinian Wadah Khanfar. Al Jazeera has become a school in
journalism where after 10 years, a journalist rises through the
ranks to manage the channel. It places the channel amongst various
global media institutions which depend on fostering their own
philosophies of programming. First, the channel underwent a major
change in its look and feel. It played on the same themes of the
peninsula, water, Islamic calligraphy but the channel became more
edgy, fast paced and it re-emphasized its hard colors of yellow and
red. It relocated to new studios and adopted an international look
comparable to international channels such as the BBC and CNN. In
contrast, female news anchors started appearing in veil. It is not
clear whether this is encouraged or respected by management, but it
surely provides a converging point between the forces of
globalization and traditionalization.
The second is a transition from a news
channel to news provider to a multicasting network. Initially, Al
Jazeera was a 24 hour regional channel; but its access to exclusive
footage, primarily during the war in Afghanistan, has turned the
channel to a news source. Al Jazeera became an exclusive provider of
footage through broadcasting deals with other companies, according
to Pravda “Al-Jazeera received $20,000 per minute for Bin Laden's
speech.”(Politiken; 2006). During the Iraq war, there was serious
collaboration with CNN dispatching senior Middle East analyst,
Octavia Nasr, to collaborate between the two channels. The latest
transition in Al Jazeera has been multicasting; the channel’s
realization that it can capitalize on its brand name to launch
various channels. In one year Al Jazeera moved from one news channel
supported by a website to five channels, with various interactive
services. In the past two years, Al Jazeera sports broadcasts two
services covering Arab and international news and games; Al Jazeera
Live, a channel similar to C-Span, broadcasts conferences and events
in real time without editing or commentary. Finally, Al Jazeera
Children's Channel was launched as an outlet for youth edutainment.[x]
The year 2006 is witnessing major additions to this network. First
the addition of Al Jazeera international is perceived as a global
channel providing an alternative to western based English news.
Second Al Jazeera, in Urdu, will tap into a niche audience of global
presence. At the time of writing, Al Jazeera is debating various
horizontal and vertical integration plans. In short, Al Jazeera has
news as its trade, with its targets the neglected markets.
The nineties started
the wave of private Arab satellite channels with the Middle East
Broadcasting Center (MBC) broadcasting from London in 1991. The
channel has boasted a very strong team of independent journalists,
who were trained and managed by news veterans of British ITV. The
channel was soon a success both as a fast paced visually appealing
news format, as well as a non-governmental pan Arab news source. MBC
is part of ARA Group owned by Saudi Sheikh Walid El Ibrahim, a
relative of the Saudi King. This Saudi linkage was instrumental in
the channel’s growth as well as editorial policy. In fact, the
channel was endorsed by Saudi businesses while its programming
respected Saudi taboos and policies.
In 2002, MBC relocated to the United
Arab Emirates, making Dubai Media City its new headquarter. This
also prompted a further expansion through the creation of a western
free to air movie channel, MBC 2. It was a matter of time before MBC
capitalized on its news legacy and started a 24 hour news channel.
The looming war in Iraq, prompted the speeding of the preparations
to mount this channel on the backbone of MBC’s extensive network and
offices in the Arab world and beyond. With an initial investment of
US$300 million, Al Arabiya launched in time to cover the latest
Iraqi war and “to quench the audience thirst for credible,
trustworthy, timely, and relevant news.”[xi]
Al Arabiya portrays
itself as “an independent, self-empowered, informative and
free-spirited satellite channel.”(Arabyia, 2006) Its main motto is
to get “closer to reality” in an attempt to reveal truths and facts
but also to position itself vis a vis its rival Al-Jazeera. The main
test for the channel was the Iraq war. At the same time, it was
embedded with U.S. forces and present in the Iraqi regime’s
controlled area. Thus, Al Arabiya was covering both angles of the
story, at the expense of having to negotiate subtly its access and
coverage. But within a year of its launch, Al Arabiya was facing
serious strategic questions; now that the channel managed its launch
and position stages, the channel is in transition.
There is ample
evidence to the notion that Al Arabiya was born to counter Al
Jazeera and, consequently, that it existed to ‘balance’ news sources
coming from the Gulf region. This idea is further supported by the
rivalry between Saudi Arabia and Qatar where media became just one
face of this undeclared hostility. On one hand, Saudi Arabia
boycotts advertising on Al Jazeera and bans its journalists from
establishing an office in the Kingdom. Similarly, Al Jazeera allows
Saudi dissidents to use its programs as a launching platform for
their criticisms and sometimes flaring messages. Over the years, Al
Jazeera made some enemies who were all interested in settling
accounts. Al Arabiya was born out of that consolidation of efforts.
At the forefront is Saudi controlled through MBC, Lebanon’s Hariri
Group, a close Saudi ally, and other investors from Kuwait, Jordan
and other Arab investors.
Investment is one
side of the rivalry. Al Arabiya sought and attracted several key Al
Jazeera figures, primarily its founding editor in chief Salah Nagm
and its star anchor Mountaha el Ramhee as well as various reporters
and producers. This talent drain was added to a resource overload:
both channels found themselves competing over a small pool of
talented journalists and broadcasting facilities. To establish a 24
hour satellite network required an infrastructure that is scarce in
most of the Arab world: satellite uplink, editing facilities etc. In
most of the Arab world where newsgathering is still largely
controlled by the state, the ability to negotiate access became
difficult now that two channels were competing. The declared
policies of these channels emphasized their editorial independence;
but in most cases than none, a certain level of negotiation was
required to gain access. Some of these notorious skillful
negotiations took place with the Saddam regime where at several
occasions both channels were denied access depending on their bias
towards or against the regime.
The coverage of the fall of Baghdad was
undoubtedly a turning point in Al Arabiya’s history, but also in its
direction. The channel underwent a major soul searching during the
year and a half that followed its launch. As a result, the channel
has taken a new path with a new leadership. Egyptian founding editor
in chief, Salah Nagem, was replaced by Saudi Abdul Rahman el Rashed
and a team of Palestinian and Lebanese MBC news veterans. Under the
leadership of el Rashed, the channel sought a re-positioning of the
channel’s mission both in terms of content and format. Beginning in
spring 2005, an important aspect of editorial change addresses the
channel format: a morning show emulates, in more than one way, the
U.S. format of morning news shows.[xii]
There has been an increase in the type of interactive programming
with more web and call-in access. Similarly, there has been an
increase in hard hitting documentaries, some that challenge
conventional views about both the Arab world and the West.
The channel became
involved in the coverage of the ‘democratization process’ taking
place in the Arab world. Its viewers were drawn to extensive
analysis and debate around the Lebanese parliamentary elections, the
Iranian and Egyptian presidential elections, the Saudi municipal
elections, as well as other ‘news’ of liberal flair. Interestingly,
these were covered using extensive graphics featuring poll results,
interviews, and a dynamic analysis only worthy of US electoral
coverage. In addition, Al Arabiya was a pioneer non-partisan
channel to air political advertising; under the pretext of a public
service announcement various ads related to Iraq were aired.
Particularly interesting were the announcements in the lead up to
the referendum on the Iraqi constitution.
Similarly, the
channel reacted to aforementioned growth in GCC stock markets, by
developing a CNBC like coverage of business news. Visually, the
channel started carrying a stock ticker, along with its news ticker.
In addition, it also included a lower left side stack containing
various exchange and international business indices. The channel
began offering more than nine hours a day of stock and business
related issues, monitoring the various stock performances around the
Arab world with a focus on Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the UAE. Towards
this end, the channel expanded its business department by
aggressively recruiting the main stars of CNBC Arabiya.
At this stage, the
transitions in Al Jazeera and Al Arabiya are moving in different
directions. While one is going global, capitalizing on its news
format in various languages and various areas; the other is
emphasizing its local/regional flair, it is implicating itself in
social life of its core Saudi audience. Any understanding of these
transitions as rigid, fixed, and pragmatic is missing the macro
picture of the business of news, timely, adaptable and moderate.
National Channels
As noted earlier,
the national channels have long been the official mouth piece of the
ruler, their programming, their overall aesthetics and logistics
depended on the wishes of the ruler. These national channels are not
immune to the transitions taking place in the news industry in the
region. The changes are not exclusive and not the same across the
spectrum. The following discussion is illustrative of the type of
managerial, editorial and aesthetic changes taking place across the
region.
Post 9/11 as well as
various terrorist acts inside Saudi Arabia focused the attention of
both Saudi citizens and expatriates to the need for a reliable
source of information. Up until 2004, Saudis relied primarily on
foreign news sources to receive news about their country. The
growing popularity of Al Jazeera, Al Arabiya and other news channels
has alerted the need for a home grown Al Ekhbaryia (the news one) an
official news channel. While Al Arabiya’s Middle East News (MEN) was
in charge of staffing, training and scheduling, Al Ekhbaryia is
definitely a Saudi channel with a Saudi mission. Throughout 2005,
the mission can be defined as assisting the government in its war
against the “enemy within”: the terrorist groups acting inside the
Kingdom. In a country where foreign media find difficulty getting
filming permits and journalists are often screened before
admittance, Al Ekhbaryia became the news source of footage about
Saudi Arabia for various regional and international outlets. Images
of Saudi security raids and check points were provided to the
international public as an evidence of Saudi government intention to
crack down on terrorist factions. In short, the introduction of Al
Ekhbaryia to the existing national channels in Saudi Arabia is a
clear indication of the shift in national news coverage to counter
transnational broadcasting and at the same time become the source of
local news for the international community.
The management of
national channels in the Gulf region has been at the center of the
debate on the indigenization of public employment. Whether
Saudization, Emiratization or Bahrainization, policies were enacted
to provide preferential access to locals for any government jobs, in
countries saturated with foreign expatriates from all nationalities.
In the UAE, the case of Abu Dhabi Television (ADTV) and Dubai
Television (DTV) provide an insight on the role of expatriates and
locals in the transitions taking place. Re-launched in 2000 with a
new management composed of various Arab nationals under the Emirati
senior manager, ADTV received its 15 minutes of international fame
during the last Iraqi war. Its exclusive footage, daring reporters
and innovative use of technology turned this general network into a
news network by excellence. Since the end of the Iraq war, the
channel’s popularity has been on the downfall. Its programs scaled
down, its packaging aging and a number of its employees were fired.
While it is difficult to reduce the channel’s demise to any single
reason, it is safe to conclude that the channel suffered a
managerial clash between its expatriate and its national employees.
Job security, promotion and editorial decision making are a few
areas where expatriates feel underprivileged compared to their local
colleagues.
On the other hand,
DTV, which suffered for some time the same symptoms as ADTV,
re-launched in 2004. In this regard, a co-habitation between locals
and expatriates has been so far maintained. By placing the channel
under the property of the semi private company, Dubai Holding, DTV
escaped the bureaucratic government direct oversight. This working
structure calls for a number of consultants whose job security and
pay check are related to their performance in advising and managing
the channel. In this structure, nationals and expatriates do not
compete but share the responsibilities. In an effort to appeal to
both local and expatriate audiences, DTV divided its news structure,
local and regional/international newscasts. The overall effect of
such policies on the news industry reflects its overall impact on
the channels. As the Gulf moves toward job localization, balancing
between the mission and the management, the staffing and the image
of a state owned channel is a challenge Gulf television industries
must face.
The national
channels of the remaining Gulf countries reveal slow or cosmetic
transitions. Again Al Arabiya’s MEN was entrusted with a US$3.7
million revamp of Bahrain Television (BTV)’s look and feel,
including news sets and graphics. At the time of writing this
article, MEN is preparing local journalists for a new approach to
news including the establishment of a website. Qatar’s national
television constitutes the stand by facility for Al Jazeera and the
training site for its national employees. The news of Qatar TV
focuses on the local concerns as it lives by the shadow of its
sister, Al Jazeera. Both Kuwait and Oman are slowly changing their
work in response to the growing competition.
The Legal Framework
There is no doubt
the development of media regulation in the Arabian Gulf is embryonic
to the aforementioned economic, security and political scenes. This
‘managed change’ has definite origins in economic successes. In
fact, Dubai’s adoption of free economic zones came after realizing
the emirate’s oil reserves cannot sustain its growth. Consequently,
Dubai started developing as a business, tourism and media center for
the region. The same economic imperatives are behind private
satellite broadcasting in Kuwait and private radio in both Bahrain
and Oman. The relationships are too interconnected and complex to be
easily discerned, but the fact remains—the media rules and
regulations are changing towards accommodating more private news
broadcasters. The following are three case studies that support this
argument.
Dubai’s success with the free economic
zones has led to the establishment of Dubai Media City in January
2001. With a 50 year exemption from personal and corporate taxation,
low operating costs and full foreign ownership, the City appealed to
over 850 companies. With a motto calling for the “freedom to
create,” news organizations were not reluctant to move to the City
with the hope of a “freedom of speech.” In less than four years,
Dubai Media City became home to international news bureaus such as
Reuters, CNN, and the Associated Press. It also attracted various
news ventures, such as the Arabic franchise of CNBC, the Pakistani
news television Geo TV, Iranian Saba TV and Iraqi Al Sharqiya.[xiii]
Apart from two cases involving business
malpractices, there has not been any complaint about lack of freedom
of speech in the Media City. Media companies have to abide by
certain guidance whereby local controversial issues or powerful
personalities are carefully tackled. A certain level of self
censorship surrounds issues dealing with national currency, the
economy and government policies. Journalists, working outside the
media free zone, are subject to a combination of penal and Islamic
law. On numerous occasions, the media was reassured of its free
status but still Reporters Without Borders ranked the UAE 137th out
of 162 countries for press freedom in 2005.[xiv]
The existing news organizations and the local authorities have
negotiated an unwritten code of conduct whereby both interests are
served; the news is reported and the government is not cracking down
on the media.
As constitutional monarchy with an
elected parliament, the Kuwaiti press is private and prospering, but
it was not until July 2003 that the government allowed the
establishment of the first private Kuwaiti satellite television
channel. Broadcasting on the first day of the holy month of Ramadan
in October 2004, Al Rai Television offers an interesting case of
policy and regulation in the region. First, it is the first case of
cross ownership between private press and satellite television
transmitting from the Gulf. The newspaper Al Rai has intended to
establish its television station in Dubai’s Media City with
preparation starting just after the fall of Baghdad, in 2003. So far
no other group has applied for satellite television licensing, but
this surely provided precedence. Initially, the channel intended to
compete with other Pan Arab channels such as the Middle East
Broadcasting Center (MBC) and the Lebanese Broadcasting Corporation
(LBC). Failing to achieve ratings outside Kuwait, the channel turned
to Kuwaiti businesses for advertising. The synergy achieved between
the channel and the newspapers should prove profitable in a booming
Kuwaiti economy. This situation of cross media ownership and a local
audience delivered to local advertisers via satellite is a unique
case in the region. By applying a similar editorial policy across
media, Al Rai manages to balance its independence and the threat of
license revocation since the broadcast authorization was granted
outside the presence of a broadcast law.
Kuwait, Bahrain and
Oman are all updating their press regulation to accommodate the new
political, security, economic and technological environment. There
seems to be unanimous acceptance to admit the private sector into
what is currently an exclusive club of government broadcasters.
Bahrain Supreme Privatization Council has allowed private radio
broadcast while Oman has granted licenses to private radio and
television stations in accordance with its Private Radio and TV
Companies' Law of 2004. In sum, the variety of regulatory solution
reflects the tendency of Gulf countries to gradually adapt
frameworks in accordance with their individual national agendas.
From the economic free zones to formal laws, the monarchs in the
region are transitioning their media scene toward pluralistic and
privately owned systems.
Concluding
Observations
The relationship
between Gulf television news and the economic, political and
security changes is complex. In addition to financial, ideological
and regulatory challenges that news media in developing countries
face, Gulf television news have to assert their future strategic
directions in a period of tumultuous and unparalleled changes. By
examining the transitions on three platforms –pan-Arab, national and
legal, I attempted to reveal the nature and extent of transitions.
The choice of the word ‘transition’ suggests that these changes are
interconnected, complex, contested and, most importantly,
incomplete. As noted, the start of these transitions cannot be
determined in time or space. Is it the start of Al Jazeera in Qatar
or the breakdown of BBC Arabic from the UK? Is it the events of 9/11
or the recent war in Iraq? While these reference points can be
justified, the end of these transitions is still unfolding and maybe
the media will be in a constant adaptation and initiation status.
However, I offer concluding remarks as ‘preliminary observations’
that help should inspire further study.
First, the news
industry is pursuing a parallel path of diversification and
consolidation. From the birth of multicasting the news oriented Al
Jazeera brand to MBC’s diversification as a news
broadcaster/provider, the channels in the region are developing
niche audiences. The context of news is no exception, as news
evolves from a witness to the ruler’s achievement into covering
special interests in sports, business, real estate and lifestyle. At
the same time, the case of Al Rai’s venture in the television
business might be the start of various similar projects where print
and broadcast are combined. Every single element of the broadcasting
business model – whether funding, programming, production, delivery
or audience – is subject to forces of desegregation and
fragmentation.
Earlier, this paper
referred to an “enemy within” the GCC countries. While the enemy
reveals itself in terrorist attacks, there is much to say about the
misinterpretation of Islam and the individual freedoms of GCC
citizens. The pan Arab channels Al Jazeera and Al Arabiya are
leading the forums for discussing the ‘managed change’. To a lesser
extent, national channels are re-structuring in light of this new
mission. By virtue of its status as the largest and most
conservative country in the Gulf, Saudi Arabia is setting a new tone
for a more liberal and mutually inclusive dialogue in the region.
Its news channel is emerging as a tool for countering the audio
visual messages of the “enemy within” – whether video broadcasts,
compact discs, audio tapes.
While broadcasting
is evolving into a wholly market-orientated system, much control is
still in the hands of rulers. Directly or indirectly, those rulers
are still bankrolling a media not wholly supported by advertising
and that still has an ideological or theological message. Whether a
pan Arab or a national channel, it seems that Gulf news stations
still need to be a protégé, to have a financial supporter, a
legal defender and a home for its headquarters. The competition
between Al Jazeera and Al Arabiya is not just the competition
between two news channels. It also represents the competition
between two visions and two states. Finally, it seems that the new
rulers have inherited a tribal tradition where the tribe’s poet
hails the chief and smears the rival. In today’s Gulf news channels,
there are still poets, but they use the television as their
platform.
Key
words:
Arab, News, Al Jazeera, Al Arabiya, Regulation
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Endnotes
[i]
The council was established on May 25, 1980. In this paper,
I will overlook the disputes concerning the naming of that
part of the world as ‘Persian’ or ‘Arab’; instead I will use
GCC and Arabian Gulf interchangeably. Renamed, The
Cooperation Council of the Arab States of the Gulf; it
serves to increase various cooperation issues between the
member states.
[ii]
Typically, national channels would portray clips and fillers
showing the monarch inaugurating or overseeing developmental
projects.
[iii]
The issue of democracy in the Gulf has been referred to a
‘liberalization’ , ‘ political openness’, ‘democratization’.
Personally, I prefer the use of ‘managed change’ or ‘managed
democracy’ because the movement has not gained enough
momentum to justify the other labels; at the same time the
governments are guiding and controlling this process.
[iv]
President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt jokingly about Al Jazeera;
quoted in various books and documents please refer to Zednik,
R. (2002) Zayani (2005) and M. El-Nawawy, M. and Iskandar,
A. (2003).
[v]
Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum in Key note speech at
Arab ICT Summit, (12, October 2002).
[vi]
The first was the Iran-Iraq war lasting from 1980 to 1988.
The second was the Desert Storm in the aftermath of Iraq's
invasion of Kuwait in 1990-1991. The third war is still on
going from March 2003.
[vii]
Agnew (2006) offers a valuable analysis of the oil revenues
and their impact on the Gulf economy.
[viii]
Addington (2005) an interesting review of the main
advertising events, figures and campaigns revealed in 2005.
[x]
For more on youth media in the Arab world, particularly, Al
Jazeera Children Channel’s concept of edutainment refer to
Kraidy & Khalil (2007, under review)
[xii]
For more on western formats used on Arab television, refer
to Khalil (2004b)
[xiii]
At the time of writing this paper, two other emirates
announced their plans to build similar free zones: Ras Al
Khaimah and Fujeirah.
About the Author
Joe F.
Khalil
is a Ph.D. student at Southern Illinois University in
Carbondale. During his twelve year professional career, he
has traveled extensively in the Middle East as director,
executive producer and consultant. He has written several
articles on Arab television development, production and
programming. His e-mail address is
joekhalil@hotmail.com
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