Kuwait
orders media blackout on 'coup' video
Kuwait has ordered a news blackout on a videotape allegedly showing former senior officials plotting to overthrow the oil-rich Gulf state's government
11
April, 2014
State
news agency KUNA reported on
Thursday that the country's royal court had ordered that
an investigation be carried out in secret.
"The
attorney general has ordered that the investigation in this case
should be confidential and ordered a ban on the publication of any
news on the case in all media," including social networks and
the Internet, attorney general Dherar Al-Asousi, was quoted
as saying by KUNA.
The
attorney general said his office was conducting "a probe into
reports indicating the existence of a tape containing information
and data implicating some people in plotting to overthrow the
regime and undermine the authority of the emir."
Asousi
said the ban was necessary because the issue "grossly harms
national interests and national unity" as well as the
investigation itself.
The
appeal came after Sheikh Ahmad Fahad Al Sabah, a senior member of
the royal family and former minister, was questioned by the public
prosecutor for five hours about the tape, which he said he had
handed over to Kuwait’s leaders.
Fahad
Al Sabah said he told the prosecutor he had a videotape
dealing with financial and political matters as well as the ruling
family and regional issues.
Conspiracy
On
Wednesday, the royal court urged Kuwaitis "to avoid debating
the issue and leave it to the public prosecution to take the
necessary measures."
The
AFP news agency reported that MP Ali al-Rashed asked Prime
Minister Sheikh Jaber Mubarak Al-Sabah if the video included a
plot to overthrow the regime and requested the names of the people
involved in any conspiracy.
A
number of MPs and the opposition called for an immediate
investigation into the issue and demanded that the government
reveal the contents of the video.
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