Middle East & Africa | Hard to believe

The Arab world’s rulers have turned journalists into courtiers

Intimidation and financial pressure make real reporting hard

2BKR4H0 Egypt, Upper Egypt, Nile valley, Aswan, Sharia as-Souq, spices market
Read it and weepImage: Alamy
|Abu Dhabi and London

In much of the world the closure of independent media triggers an uproar. Not in Algeria. Only a handful of reporters attended a press conference on January 7th called by the lawyers of Ihsane el-Kadi, a journalist, after he was arrested and the radio station and website he owned were closed. Goons confiscated his journalists’ mobile phones and computers. “People are too shocked and scared by the arrest to publish it,” says Tin Hinane, his daughter, a respected Algerian analyst. “Algeria’s media have all been co-opted by the state or forced to shut down.”

This article appeared in the Middle East & Africa section of the print edition under the headline “Hard to believe”

From the January 14th 2023 edition

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