The television channel will launch in 2007. It will initially broadcast 12 hours a day and be freely available to everyone with a satellite or cable connection in the region.
It will cover international and major regional issues and carry multi-media discussion programmes and debates in conjunction with the BBC's well-established and trusted Arabic radio and online services. The BBC's Arabic television service will draw upon the BBC's un-matched newsgathering resources.
The operating cost of £19 million a year will be found from the BBC World Service's existing grant-in-aid funding from the UK Government.
BBC World Service Director, Nigel Chapman says: "The BBC's Arabic language service is already the most successful, trusted and respected voice in the Middle East with more than 60 years experience of broadcasting in the Arabic language on radio, and more recently and successfully, online. The BBC Arabic Television Service will build on this legacy by offering trusted and accurate news with an international agenda."
"BBC Arabic will be the only major international news provider in the Middle East offering a service in Arabic across television, radio and online ; sharing views and perspectives across the region and the wider world."
"Recent research from seven capital cities across the Middle East indicates that between 80 and 90 per cent of those surveyed are likely to watch an Arabic Television service from the BBC. We will be satisfying a strong demand from the region for accurate, trusted, independent and comprehensive news and analysis together with a discussion forum for Arabic speaking audiences in the region."
The new BBC Arabic television service will:
• Meet the strong demand for a BBC Arabic television service repeatedly expressed in surveys.
• Make the BBC the only tri-media international news provider offering Arabic language news and current affairs on television, radio and online.
• Draw on 67 years of BBC experience covering the Middle East in Arabic - supported by the world's most extensive newsgathering operation: 250 news correspondents reporting from 50 bureaux allowing a global rather than purely regional perspective.
• Be totally independent in line with BBC's long-held reputation for impartial, trust-worthy news reporting and analysis.
• The first publicly funded international television service launched by the BBC.

Posted by Lara Lynn Golden, News Editor



