Following is a TV
report on the banning of Al-Aqsa TV from the Eutelsat satellite, which
aired on New TV on June 17, 2010.
Anchor: After
Al-Manar TV, the Hamas-owned Al-Aqsa TV is banned in France. The reason:
It incites to resistance.
Excerpts from MEMRI
TV clip (no. 1497) of Al-Aqsa TV, featuring Mickey-Mouse character Farfour
Reporter: Israel
could not tolerate Farfour’s call to the children of Palestine –
via Al-Aqsa TV – to continue the resistance until the complete liberation
of Palestinian soil, so it exerted pressure to ban Al-Aqsa in France.
The Conseil supérieur de l’audiovisuel banned Al-Aqsa TV from broadcasting
on the Eutelsat satellite in Europe, under the pretext that it was inciting
to hatred, but without going into any detail. This is because the animated
cartoon figure Farfour is spurring children to support resistance against
Israel.
This aroused discontent
in Washington and Tel Aviv, especially after Farfour was beaten to death
by an Israeli interrogator in the final episode. The “Pioneers of
Tomorrow” show replaced the martyr Farfour with his cousin Nahoul,
who declared that he would continue to wage Jihad.
Excerpts from MEMRI
TV clip (no. 1510) of Al-Aqsa TV, featuring giant bee Nahoul
Reporter: Israel
has claimed that the show incites Palestinian children to hatred of
Israel, and US media outlets have accused Al-Aqsa TV of stealing the
American Mickey Mouse character and turning it into Farfour, in order
to teach Palestinian children so-called “terrorism” and hatred of
the US. The Hamas movement has denied this.
It should be noted that
some Jewish and Israeli newspapers, TV, and radio channels, which operate
within Europe and the US, spread propaganda for Israel without any accountability
or supervision.
This is a blatant manifestation
of the policy of double standards in the skies of the old continent,
which is ruled today by the Zionist lobby.