Iraq orders shut down of a TV station
Iraq orders shut down of a TV station
The TV station was shutdown amid controversy over media coverage of the execution of Saddam Hussein.

Baghdad: The Iraqi Government said that a privately owned television station had incited violence and hatred in its programming and odered its Baghdad office closed, amid controversy over media coverage of the execution of Saddam Hussein on Tuesday.

However, a journalist for Al-Sharqiya station, which broadcasts from Dubai, said the station closed its Baghdad office three months ago because of attacks on its staff and that he was unaware of the government order.

"The channel administration decided to close it for security reasons," said the journalist, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of safety concerns.

Al-Sharqiya remained on the air late on Tuesday. The station is owned by Saad al-Bazzaz, a one-time chief of radio and television for the former dictator, who was hanged at dawn on Saturday.

"We had sent many warnings to the channel previously, but it insisted on circulating false news that provoked violence and hatred," said spokesman for the Interior Ministry, Brig Abdul-Karim Khalaf.

Khalaf cited what he said was a false report about the abduction of three Sunni Arab female students from a university.

Iraq's government is dominated by Shiite Muslims, while Al-Sharqiya is perceived by some as leaning toward the viewpoint of the Sunni sect, which was dominant during Saddam's ruthless rule for a quarter-century.

The majority Shiites and minority Sunni Arabs are now locked in a sectarian war that has claimed thousands of lives.

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