| Reuters | ||
RIYADH — Saudi Arabia has closed the Jeddah office of a Lebanon-based television network after it aired an interview with a Saudi man speaking about his sexual escapades, a government spokesman said on Sunday. Mazen Abdul-Jawad, 32, was arrested last month in the Red Sea city of Jeddah after shocking Saudi Arabia, one of the most conservative countries in the world, by recounting details of his sexual exploits on Lebanese channel LBC. The divorced father of four spoke to camera from his bedroom in Jeddah about how couples can spice up their sex lives. “Everything happens in this room,” he said on an episode of the salacious show “Ahmar Bilkhat al-Areed” (Wide Red Lines), before launching into descriptions of foreplay techniques and tricks for cruising women on the streets of Jeddah. A spokesman for the ministry of culture and information in Riyadh said a committee had decided to close the Jeddah office of LBC because of the interview. The daily al-Watan newspaper said authorities also closed other offices of LBC, which is mainly owned by Saudi billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, in the kingdom. Abdul-Jawad has been charged with publicising vice and lawyers say he may face the death penalty. Like many Arab countries, Saudi Arabia prohibits sexually explicit content on television and in newspapers, magazines and books. | ||
Monday, August 10, 2009
Sex closes Saudi broadcaster
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Ghana Pundit Headline News
E-mail subscription
Pan Africa News
Graphic Ghana
MYJOYONLINE.COM
Peacefm Online - News with a vision
The Times - World News
The Times - Africa News
Pambazuka News :Emerging powers in Africa Watch
AfricaNews - RSS News
The Zimbabwe Telegraph
BBC News | Africa | World Edition
Modern Ghana
My Blog List
-
Has the US Overtaken China in African Investment? - Last week we had a flurry of email requests from reporters who wanted to ask us about the comparative Africa foreign direct investment (FDI) data on Chin...2 months ago
-
African Extractive Industries: PRC Neocolonialism - That the slow development of the African continent can be traced to Western colonialism is an archetype of this field of study: Mainly interested in extr...1 year ago
-
The Emerging Security Threats and Ghana Special Forces (Part 2) - By Lord Aikins Adusei Does Ghana Need Special Forces?West Africa where Ghana is situated occupies a strategically important position as a major energy supp...13 years ago
-
Egyptians mass in Tahrir to honour uprising - Hundreds of thousands of people have gathered in Cairo's Tahrir Square to commemorate the first anniversary of the Egyptian revolution that toppled their l...14 years ago
-
Egyptians mass in Tahrir to honour uprising - Hundreds of thousands of people have gathered in Cairo's Tahrir Square to commemorate the first anniversary of the Egyptian revolution that toppled their l...14 years ago
-
-
-
-
R.I.P.
AfriGator



No comments:
Post a Comment