United Arab Emirates
Organisation:
The United Arab Emirates is one of the best
connected countries in the region, alongside
Bahrain and Qatar.
The government generally blocks content that
“harms Islam”. Pornography,
gambling and homosexuality are
taboo subjects on the Internet, but
it is not unusual to find websites
made inaccessible for political
reasons. Criticism of the government
is also a very sensitive issue.
The appeal court in Ras al
Khaimah on 20 January 2008
quashed all charges against the owner of the
website www.majan.net, Muhammad Rashed
Shehhi, who was sued for “defamation” over an
“offensive” comment posted on his site by an
Internet user. Muhammad Rashed Shehhi had
been sentenced on 8 August 2007 to one year in
prison and a fine equivalent to 15,000 euros.
During his appeal hearing in October, the prosecutor
had called for a five-month prison sentence
against him.
The Telecommunications Regulatory Authority
(TRA) has called on the national telecommunications
company, Etisalat, to block access to all
websites with an Israeli domain name (.il). But
not all pro-Israel sites are censored. The
Jerusalem Post (www.jpost.com) is,
for example, accessible.
Social networking sites are also targeted
for censorship, such as Hi5,
Facebook, Friendster, and all those
websites that host dating services
such as Yahoo! Personals and
Match.com.
Some websites are inaccessible because of
Saudi Arabian censorship since the two countries
share an information channel. Since the
start of 2008, the Saudi communications authority
has ordered the closure of some websites
because of their content dealing with religious
affairs or morals. The website on blog hosting
and design Onix.com has been inaccessible
since December. The blog of Eve, a Saudi
woman who cover the rights of women and religious
affairs in the country, has suffered the
same fate.
Published on
Updated on
20.01.2016