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Al Sharqiya now has been gaining a growing audience with its mixture of popular current affairs, satire and Iraq's first reality TV programs. [ 1 ] The satellite channel with the greatest reach in Iraq, according to a June Ipsos-Stat poll, is the Saudi-owned news channel Al Arabiya with 41 percent reach, followed by private Iraqi satellite ...
Al Forat Network (Arabic: قناة الفرات الفضائية) is a satellite television network in Iraq. The Arabic language network is owned by Ammar al-Hakim, an Iraqi Shi'a cleric and politician. Al-Forat has 300 employees, with offices located in the Karrada district in Baghdad. [1]
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In February 2003 ahead of the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq, Al-Alam began terrestrially broadcasting from Iran into Iraq. The channel's studios were located in Tehran, but the channel used a relay station on a hill near the Iran-Iraq border to broadcast into Iraq. Al-Alam is presented in Arabic, but all the anchors and newscasters are Iranian.
The mass media in Iraq includes print, radio, television, and online services. Iraq became the first Arab country to broadcast from a TV station, in 1954 [1]. As of 2020, more than 100 radio stations and 150 television stations were broadcasting to Iraq in Arabic, English, Kurdish, Turkmen, and Neo-Aramaic.
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Iraq was home to the first television station in the Middle East, which began during the 1950s. As part of a plan to help Iraq modernize, British telecommunications company Pye Limited built and commissioned a television broadcast station in the capital city of Baghdad. [1] Following the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq, the Iraqi state media ...
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