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Doha - Al Jazeera media network is seen to play a role in determining Qatar's position on international maps. Its existence, seen as an attempt by the small country in the Gulf region to turn its financial advantage into global influence and visibility.
Qatar's efforts are considered successful. One of the most visible is the country's successful election to host the 2022 World Cup.
Later, Al Jazeera dragged the swirl of conflict. A few days ago, Saudi Arabia's Ministry of Culture and Information revoked operational licenses and closed the media office.
The reason, the media is said to be promoting terrorist plots, supports Houthi militants - a group that is being fought by Saudi in Yemen, and allegedly trying to compromise Saudi security by inciting public unrest aimed at harming the sovereignty of the kingdom.
Al Jazeera defended himself and insisted his side was objective.
The crackdown on Al Jazeera came hours after Saudi Arabia announced a diplomatic break with Qatar on Monday 5 June. Later, eight other countries, namely Bahrain, United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Yemen, Libya, Maldives, Mauritius, and Mauritania also follow the Saudi footsteps.
A whole vote, accusing Qatar of supporting extremism and terrorism.
Qatar itself is currently isolated. They denied all Saudi Arabia charges and insisted they were ready to dialogue to end the tension.
A source in Doha told the BBC that media reform would be a key requirement aimed at Qatar if it wanted to start a dialogue. Al Jazeera may not be closed, but editorial policy should change.
Meanwhile, Qatar's new television network, Al Araby, based in London is likely to be closed.
"Over the years, Al Jazeera has been the trigger for contention between Gulf states and Egypt, even before its heyday of preaching the Arab Spring," said Sultan Sooud al-Qassemi, an observer from the United Arab Emirates.
Al-Qassemi exemplified in 2002, the Saudis were angry over Al Jazeera's report and decided to withdraw its ambassador. The ambassador was finally sent back in 2008.
In 2014, Qatar promised to stop "interfering" with the domestic political affairs of neighboring countries. The statement was made by Qatar to end the diplomatic row which triggered Saudi, UAE, and Bahrain to attract their ambassador.
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Regarding the latest tensions, al-Qassemi predicts, Gulf countries will demand the closure of Al Jazeera's media network before various media negotiating efforts take place. Obviously it will have major consequences, especially for the 3,000 Al Jazeera staff spread across the globe.
H A Hellyer, an analyst and writer reveals, Qatar's current position is weak.
"The country has little space and any deal to bring Qatar's foreign policy closer to Saudi Arabia may involve changes to influential media networks - including Al Jazeera - and possibly also Al Araby," Hellyer wrote in his analysis.
Qatar expert at King's College London David Roberts also agrees that Al Jazeera will be on "requirements list" if Qatar wants to end the tension.
"But this is a negotiation and there is no certainty that Qatar will surrender," Roberts said.
Roberts added, although Al Jazeera's Arabic service has softened its report, but he says the media is "still thorny especially in the Egyptian issue".
The media itself has stopped "kidnapping" Saudi Arabia since a decade ago or precisely after Riyadh sent back their ambassador.
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