Bahrain says it suspended Saudi prince's TV channel for lacking license, anti-terror standards
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Bahrain says it suspended a new pan-Arab news channel within hours of its first broadcast because it has no license and failed to meet anti-terrorist standards.
The island kingdom's Information Affairs Authority said Monday that the government has blocked transmissions of the Alarab network since Feb. 2 partly because it failed "to take account of efforts aimed at stemming the tide of extremism and terrorism."
Alarab, which is backed by a billionaire Saudi prince, made no comment.
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One of Alarab's first broadcast interviews was with government critic Khalil al-Marzooq, a top official in the largest Shiite opposition bloc in the Sunni-ruled kingdom.
Al-Marzooq and other Shiite lawmakers withdrew from Bahrain's parliament in 2011. He was acquitted last year of "inciting terrorism," a charge that human rights groups called politically motivated.