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Alrai TV is a private Kuwaiti satellite TV channel. It was launched in 2004 and it is part of Al Rai Media Group, which publishes Al Rai , a daily newspaper in Kuwait . It is the first private television channel in Kuwait.
Pages in category "Television stations in Kuwait" ... may not reflect recent changes. A. Alrai TV; B. ... Eastern and African TV channel) Disney Jr. (European, Middle ...
Al Rai (Arabic: الرأي, lit. 'The Opinion'), which was published as Al Rai Alaam (Arabic: الرأي العام, lit. 'Public Opinion') from 1995 to 2006, is a Kuwaiti daily newspaper. [1] According to a 2007 survey by the Washington-based Intermedia group, Al Rai ranked one among Kuwaiti newspapers for the fifth year in a row.
The state broadcaster Kuwait Television operates the domestic channels, including KTV1 (music shows, internal news, current affairs and official conferences coverage), KTV2 (family programmes in English, Kuwaiti TV series subbed in English and English Movies subbed in Arabic), Al Akhbar (the main international news coverage channel), and KTV Sport (formerly KTV3).
Alrai TV; Alrayyan TV; ... Karbala TV; KBC (TV channel) Kuwait Television; L. ... MBC 1 (Middle Eastern and North African TV channel) MBC 3; MBC Drama (Middle East ...
The number of newspapers published reached the peak in 2009, when there were 14 Arabic dailies, three English dailies and a dozens weekly newspapers in Kuwait. [2] But the numbers decreased since then either on account of the 2008 financial crisis and the increase of digital news sources or by government censorship.
Dhaif became famous when she presented a program on Al-Rai, [1] a private Kuwaiti television channel which talked about taboo issues such as poverty, sadism, prostitution, corruption, and inequality. It also included social issues such as enslavement of foreign labor and problems faced by local women who are married to foreigners.
The list is a list of television channels and stations in the Arab World, as well as Arab-based Western television channels. The majority, if not all, of these channels, are chiefly in Arabic . Africa