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Al Arabiya was originally launched in Dubai Media City, United Arab Emirates, on 3 March 2003. [3] [4] [5] An early funder, the production company Middle East News (then headed by Ali Al-Hedeithy), said the goal was to provide "a balanced and less provocative" alternative to Al Jazeera.
Al-Arabiya English was launched in 2007. [1] The website carried wire news and selected translated articles from Al Arabiya's main Arabic language news site. In November 2013, the site was relaunched with a new design that provided captioned and searchable news clips from the main Al Arabiya news channel.
Al Araby (Arabic: العربي) is a general television network launched in January 2015. It broadcasts a variety of programs and news shows in Arabic, covering society, politics, entertainment and culture. The network has bureaus in several Arab and Western capitals, through 11 bureaus in the Middle East and worldwide. [1]
Al-Hadath [1] (Arabic: الحدث, lit. 'The Event') is a Saudi news interactive channel focusing on political events in the Arab region. It is available on the British Freeview service via the Vision TV [2] [3] [4] streaming service and from 28 March 2022, it joined Al Arabiya on Freeview channel 273.
Al-Arab's regional competitors were Qatari-owned Al Jazeera and Saudi-government-owned Al Arabiya, along with BSkyB's Sky News Arabia. [7] In a January 2012 interview, Al-Waleed described Al Jazeera as the "masses channel" while implying that Al Arabiya is the "government channel" among the two main news channels in the Middle East.
Rawafed is a flagship Al Arabiya television programme, consisting of a half-hour documentary broadcast once a week (Wednesday) on the Al Arabiya News Channel. Its host and director is Ahmad Ali El Zein, whose style of smooth questioning brought a huge world audience to the show.
Pages in category "Al Arabiya" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. ...
The official Qatar News Agency, which claimed to have been hacked prior to the onset of the diplomatic crisis, later filed complaints via law firm Carter-Ruck to the British media regulator Ofcom against Sky News Arabia, alongside Saudi-owned Al Arabiya, for "violating impartiality code and accuracy in news' sourcing". [22]