
By: Vickie J. Rubinson
There is no right to a free press in Saudi Arabia. According to the State Department's 2008 Human Rights reports, authorities have the right, under law, to "prevent anything that can lead to disunity, sedition and separation," from being published.
Foreign press reports are regularly censored and all public employees are enjoined from "engaging in dialogue with local and foreign media."
On Tuesday, Barack Obama will depart for Saudi Arabia, with a large contingent of traveling press who are generally not subject to such restrictions. But according to TIME magazine, by agreement between the Obama Administration and the Saudi government, the White House press corps will be severly restricted while in the country. Here are the instructions one reporter received from the U.S. State Department:
The Saudi government is permitting journalists accompanying President Obama entry into the country without a visa or the usual customs procedures. While in Saudi Arabia, journalists are expressly prohibited from leaving the hotel or engaging in any journalistic acitivities outside of coverage of the POTUS visit. Those who do so risk arrest and detention by Saudi authorities.
Good luck White House press corps.
There is no right to a free press in Saudi Arabia. According to the State Department's 2008 Human Rights reports, authorities have the right, under law, to "prevent anything that can lead to disunity, sedition and separation," from being published.
Foreign press reports are regularly censored and all public employees are enjoined from "engaging in dialogue with local and foreign media."
On Tuesday, Barack Obama will depart for Saudi Arabia, with a large contingent of traveling press who are generally not subject to such restrictions. But according to TIME magazine, by agreement between the Obama Administration and the Saudi government, the White House press corps will be severly restricted while in the country. Here are the instructions one reporter received from the U.S. State Department:
The Saudi government is permitting journalists accompanying President Obama entry into the country without a visa or the usual customs procedures. While in Saudi Arabia, journalists are expressly prohibited from leaving the hotel or engaging in any journalistic acitivities outside of coverage of the POTUS visit. Those who do so risk arrest and detention by Saudi authorities.
Good luck White House press corps.
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