Emirati conglomerate drops plans for Lebanese TV channel over alleged threats
A wealthy Emirati businessman has scrapped plans to launch a new television channel in Lebanon, with his company alleging he and his staff had faced physical threats.
Khalaf Ahmad Al Habtoor's Dubai-based Al Habtoor Group conglomerate announced on Tuesday it had cancelled the launch of the television channel, which aimed to initially broadcast cultural, social, and sporting programmes.
Al Habtoor Group cited "severe security challenges", including what it called physical threats against its founder and chairman, Khalaf Al Habtoor, and staff members.
It said it had lodged criminal and civil complaints in Lebanon and elsewhere against those it said had menaced the Group and staff.
"Following the project announcement, the group encountered a barrage of orchestrated campaigns including accusations, slander, and threats," Al Habtoor Group said in a statement.
It did not identify who it believed had been implicated in the "orchestrated campaigns". The company thanked Lebanese Minister of Information Ziad Makary for his support.
"We have encountered insurmountable obstacles that exceed what can reasonably be borne regarding the safety and security of our team," Khalaf Al Habtoor said.
"We find ourselves compelled to seek an alternative to launching the project from Lebanon," he said, citing a lack of necessary security and stability to proceed with the launch.
Makary told Reuters he regretted Al Habtoor's decision. Asked about allegations of threats against Al Habtoor and his staff, Makary said: "We were prepared even if there were any threats to address them."
Al Habtoor Group's business interests span construction, real estate, and hospitality in the Middle East, Europe and the United States. The Group has two Hilton hotels in Lebanon.
Khalaf Al Habtoor, a prominent Dubai businessman, has in the past been critical of Lebanon's Hezbollah, the heavily armed, Shia Muslim group backed by Iran.
Hezbollah has been declared a terrorist group by the UAE, Saudi Arabia, other Gulf states, and the United States.
The Sunni Muslim-ruled Gulf states, including the UAE, were once major investors in Lebanon but now largely shun it over Hezbollah, whose political wing also sits in the parliament.
In 2018, Khalaf Al Habtoor said the Americans, Israelis, and Europeans could "dismantle the threat of Hezbollah and rescue the Lebanese", according to the Al Habtoor Group website.
He told a conference at the time: "The Lebanese are prisoners in their country. Members of Hezbollah are forming the government in Lebanon, I cannot understand it. We should not accept this."
(Reuters)