Log in

View Full Version : Kuwait bans Fahrenheit 9/11



Subversive Pessimist
1st August 2004, 21:06
It's official: Kuwait is America's *****.

http://us.news1.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/rids/20040731/i/r2556929707.jpg
[Look how cute they are... Holding hands and everything. Anyways, back to the article - Strawberry]

Kuwait, a major US ally in the Gulf, has banned Michael Moores Fahrenheit 9/11 because it deems the movie insulting to the Saudi Arabian royal family and critical of Americas invasion of Iraq, an official said today.

We have a law that prohibits insulting friendly nations, and ties between Kuwait and Saudi Arabia are special, Abdul-Aziz Bou Dastour, cinema and production supervisor at the Information Ministry, told The Associated Press said

He said the film insulted the Saudi royal family by saying they had common interests with the Bush family and that those interests contradicted with the interests of the American people.

Fahrenheit 9/11, which won the top honour at Mays Cannes Film Festival, depicts the White House as asleep at the wheel before the September 11, 2001, attacks in New York and Washington.

Moore accuses US President George W. Bush of fanning fears of future terrorism to win public support for the Iraq war.

The Saudi royal family has taken issue with the movie for claiming that high-ranking Saudi nationals were allowed to flee the United States immediately after the attacks at a time when American airspace had been closed to all commercial traffic.

The 9/11 commission investigating the 2001 terrorist attacks found no evidence that any flights of Saudi nationals took place before the reopening of national airspace on September 13.

Prince Turki al-Faisal, the Saudi Arabian ambassador to London, said in an interview that Moore did not do proper research for his documentary.

On Iraq, the Kuwaiti official said the film criticised Americas policy on invading Iraq and this was tantamount to criticising Kuwait for (what it did) to liberate Iraq.

Kuwait was the launch pad for the war that unseated Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein, who ordered the invasion of Kuwait 14 years ago. A US-led coalition fought the Gulf War that evicted Iraqis after seven months of occupation.

Saudi Arabia opened its land and air space to coalition forces that liberated Kuwait, and Kuwaitis are still grateful for that.

Last month, the state-owned Kuwait National Cinema Co. asked for the movie to be shown in Kuwait, but the ministry denied its request. The company monopolises cinemas in Kuwait and all movies have to be sanctioned by government censors.

The movie made Iraq look like a paradise whose problems started with the American invasion, the official said. It would have angered Kuwaitis.

The film is already playing elsewhere in the Middle East, including the United Arab Emirates and Lebanon.


http://www.breakingnews.ie/2004/08/01/story159672.html

h&s
2nd August 2004, 08:42
On Iraq, the Kuwaiti official said the film criticised Americas policy on invading Iraq and this was tantamount to criticising Kuwait for (what it did) to liberate Iraq.

So they don't allow critisism of the government in Kuwait?
Are they a 'democratic' country or a dictatorship?
They just seem like a bunch of U$ ass-licking capitalists to me. (The government, not the people.)