Dubai: Programming at a pan-Arab news channel owned by Saudi billionaire Prince Al Waleed Bin Talal was unavailable on Monday, hours after its first transmission from Bahrain.

The satellite feed of Al Arab News Channel showed only promotional material, and an Al Arab executive declined to comment.

The channel took to the air at 1300 GMT on Sunday.

One of its first segments included an opponent of Bahrain’s government, sparking criticism in pro-government Bahraini daily Akhbar Al Khaleej.

The newspaper said it learnt that Al Arab was stopped for “not adhering to the norms prevalent in Gulf countries”.

In a column in the same newspaper, editor-in-chief Anwar Abdul Rahman asked: “Is Al Arab really Arab?” He condemned the channel for hosting former member of parliament Khalil Marzouq, who is “radical to the core.”

“Resorting to muscle flexing in news coverage, with the hope of proving that you are an independent channel, is not going to work,” he wrote.

Al Arab entered a crowded field that includes the first regional broadcaster, 19-year-old Al Jazeera which is subsidised by Qatar.

It is also a rival for Dubai-based Al-Arabiya, established in 2003 and owned by Saudi Shaikh Waleed Al Ebrahim.

Critics have accused the established broadcasters of reflecting their owners’ political views, especially during the 2011 Arab Spring uprisings against authoritarian regimes in the Middle East and North Africa.

Both long-running channels deny any slant in their reporting.

Al Arab had vowed to be even-handed in its coverage.

“We are not going to take sides,” Jamal Khashoggi, the general manager, told AFP in an interview before the launch.

“I think a news channel should not have a political agenda... We should just be a news channel that provides accurate, objective information.”

Because Saudi Arabia does not allow “independent” channels, Al Arab had to find an alternative location “so Bahrain is appropriate”, he said.

“Our channel in Bahrain is the first independent channel to be launched” in country which is linked to its ally Saudi Arabia by a causeway.

The tiny but strategic Gulf nation has been rocked by unrest since a 2011 uprising led by its Shiite majority demanding a constitutional monarchy and more representative government.