Saudi Arabia: Where Plagiarism is a Crime

By • on October 20, 2009

Saudi bloggers are rallying to the support of a fellow blogger who claims that a newspaper had lifted photographs and copy from his blog without permission.

Saudi Jeans‘ Ahmed Al Omran has little praise for the paper being accused of plagiarism:

Although al-Yaum newspaper has enjoyed a monopoly in the Eastern Province (EP) for a very long time, it remains one of the weakest publications in the country. I was born and raised in the EP, and I used to read Ashraq al-Awsat, al-Hayat and al-Watan but not al-Yaum.

Al Omran’s distaste was further fueled after Saudi Aggie, a student named Nathan at the newly opened King Abdulla University of Science and Technology (KAUST) raised the alarm that the paper had used his photographs and coverage of the recent students elections. He posts a copy of the clipping from the paper and asks his readers:

I can’t believe this! Look at this article that was published recently in the major Saudi Arabian newspaper, Al Yaum. Do those pictures look familiar? How about the words? If you can’t read Arabic, this was taken almost verbatim from my blog post “Elections” published October 7th, 2009. This can’t be legal, not even in Saudi Arabia!

The American student further adds:

If I was in the USA I would file an intellectual property rights case against Al Yaum. If it was the New York Times that plagiarized my blog I would be rich right now. Do intellectual rights to published thoughts and photos have any value here?

Al Omran notes:

Nathan is thinking about suing them, which would be awesome, but probably they have already embarrassed themselves enough.

Commentators on Nathan’s blog are sympathetic to the blogger’s plight.

Mazoo writes:

I’m sorry to see that happening to you ..
however , it’s a common thing here in KSA :D ..

I heard about many many cases in which my friends content ( blog entries , pictures and ideas ) have been stolen by some lazy journalists. They complained about it and some wrote to the chief editor – some of them post an apology and some of them fired the person who stole the content

Al Hanouf, who describes herself as a law student,