23 June 2009
Euronews has gained 31 million homes in the USA, and with distribution in Brazil and Chile, now has distribution in eight Latin American countries.
Euronews in Spanish is now broadcast everyday on the US channel HITN-TV (Hispanic Information and Telecommunication Network) from 10:30 to 11:00pm (US Eastern Time Zone). HITN-TV is available all over the country on both American satellite platforms: Dish Network and DirecTV. Distributed on the basic and Latino programming packages of the two platforms, Euronews now reaches 30 new million digital households by satellite. Euronews reaches one million digital homes via the broadcast of HITN-TV on these cable and IPTV platforms.
“The multilingual aspect of euronews allows the channel to expand all over the world. With its Spanish and Portuguese versions in particular, euronews is perfect to offer a different perspective on world news in Latin America. In North America, euronews already broadcast in English, now benefits 15% of the US population which are Hispanic. For the first time euronews is broadcast in Spanish in the USA and reaches an additional 31 million homes. With the latest developments in North and Latin America, euronews is now available worldwide to more than 291 million homes” said Philippe Cayla, Chairman of the Executive board of Euronews S.A..
23 June 2009
As videos, pictures, e-mails and calls from Iran poured into the Voice of America (VOA), the U.S. international broadcaster introduced a two-hour Special Report to keep its millions of viewers informed.
“With the Iranian government crackdown on media operating inside the country, the Persian News Network (PNN) has become a lifeline to our audience, allowing them to know the latest events unfolding there,” said Alex Belida, acting director of PNN, which reaches nearly 30 percent of Iranian adults every week by satellite television.
Special Report is preempting regularly scheduled programs, from 6:00-8:00 p.m. Tehran time, at least for this week. PNN also recently introduced a daily breakfast show, The Morning Show, from 7:00-8:00 a.m. Tehran time. The programs examine events in Iran in the aftermath of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s declared victory, the ensuing protests and the global reaction to developments in Iran.
VOA’s coverage is drawing an overwhelming reaction from inside Iran. Direct visits to PNN’s Internet site (http://www.voapnn.com) from inside the country increased over 800 percent since early June.
Citizens of Iran have sent thousands of videos and pictures – over 300 videos in one 24-hour period – depicting events inside the country. Videos are shown on PNN after careful review. (You can see the latest videos from inside Iran by going to: http://www.VOANews.com/persian/_-electionprotests.cfm or by going directly to PNN’s YouTube site: http://www.youtube.com/user/PNNVideo).
PNN’s viewers have also sent thousands of e-mails, and posted comments on PNN blogs, Facebook, a dedicated YouTube channel, Twitter and other social media sites. Callers have phoned in to various PNN shows.
VOA’s PNN has the largest combined radio and television audience of all international broadcasters in Iran, with nearly one in three adults in Iran watching or listening to PNN broadcasts at least weekly. Research indicates 96 percent of Iranians daily watch TV, which is the preferred medium for getting news and information.
23 June 2009
The Broadcasting Board of Governors increased television, radio and Internet transmissions of the Persian-language programs of the Voice of America (VOA)’s Persian News Network and Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty’s Radio Farda to fight jamming and signal interference in Iran.
“Despite accusations about foreign media, our broadcasters are simply reporting the news, increasingly by drawing upon the eye-witness accounts of Iranians themselves,” said D. Jeffrey Hirschberg of the Broadcasting Board of Governors which oversees both VOA and RFE/RL. “This Iranian interference with our television and radio signals is against international agreements and, most importantly, an injustice to the Iranian people.”
Jamming of satellite television broadcasts has increased in recent weeks beginning in May and twice in June including interference with BBG and other broadcasters’ satellite uplink and downlink signals. To combat this censorship, VOA’s Persian News Network (PNN) television programs are now beamed through five satellites with six different distribution channels.
Shortwave transmissions of Radio Farda were increased beginning June 21 as part of an effort to counteract jamming by the Iranian government. With the recent shortwave additions, the most popular morning and early-to-mid evening hours have at least five simultaneous transmissions and ten at peak times. The shortwave jamming of international broadcasters began on June 14.
As well reported, use of the Internet new media has been an information lifeline for many Iranians during the aftermath of the elections. Visits to VOA’s PNN website and RFE/RL’s Radio Farda website the weekend of June 20 were both over 400% more than at the start of the month.
Iranian government censorship of external news sites has increased. VOA’s PNN and RFE/RL’s Radio Farda have seen a 200% growth in use of proxy servers and web censorship circumvention software from the day before the Friday election to three days later. Over the weekend, the response to the VOA and RFE/RL Persian-language Web sites has been so great that our proxy service reached full capacity, resulting in some visitors not reaching the site. We are adding additional infrastructure to handle this increased traffic.
To better serve their audiences in Iran with breaking news of events as they unfold, VOA and RFE/RL implemented a number of program expansions in the last week including:
– VOA added a one-hour morning satellite TV news program and replaced two hours of its normal evening program line up with a two-hour Special Report on the latest developments inside Iran following the disputed Presidential election. – RFE/RL extended its evening and midnight news magazine shows from 30 to 90 minutes, and is interrupting non-news programming as necessary with breaking updates. – VOA established a new Twitter account in Persian, which attracted over 3,500 followers in less than a week. PNN’s main Web site, plus its YouTube, related blogs and Facebook pages all increased their postings of news, video and viewer comments. PNN has received, verified and broadcast hundreds of user-generated videos from inside Iran. – RFE/RL posted a special blog to follow the election and aftermath, which is updated with photos, videos and comments from inside Iran. Radio Farda is also providing instant updates and analysis on its website, and Twitter.
VOA Persian News Network: Reaching nearly 30% of adults each week, VOA broadcasts seven hours of original TV programming daily, including a new one-hour breakfast show added to cover the aftermath of the election, repeated for a full 24 hours on satellite and streamed online. VOA simulcasts four hours of TV programs on medium wave and shortwave radio and produces a one-hour daily radio program.
RFE/RL Radio Farda: Broadcasts 24 hours a day on shortwave, medium wave and satellite, and streams online. Seventeen hours is live news, including evening and midnight magazine shows, and seven hours (off-peak) is music.
More than 30% of Iranians tune in to BBG broadcasts at least once a week.
23 June 2009
A report on the RFE/RL web site:
A woman named Neda has become an icon of the ongoing antigovernment protests in Iran. Millions of people in Iran and throughout the world have now seen a graphic amateur video of Neda’s apparent death on a street in central Tehran, after having been shot in the chest while attending one of the rallies with her father.
Neda Agha Soltan, who was reportedly killed when hit by a bullet during a protest in Tehran on June 20. Some in Iran are calling for June 20, the day of the violent crackdown on protesters that was apparently Neda’s last, to become known as “Neda’s Day.” Neda mean “voice” in Persian. Neda was reportedly buried hastily in Tehran’s Behesht Zahra cemetery on June 21. According to unconfirmed reports, authorities banned a mourning ceremony for her at a mosque in the capital today.
The tragic images have served as a reminder of the prominent roles that thousands of women from all walks of life are playing in the protests against Iran’s recent presidential election, which they believe was rigged.
‘Take To The Streets’
Indeed, it was a woman, Effat Hashemi, the wife of former Iranian President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, who was among the first to call for public protests in the event of fraud. Her call was captured in a video, released early last week, that shows her speaking to reporters after casting her ballot on June 12. Reporter: “What is your advice to the supporters of the candidates after election day?” Hashemi: “They must take to the streets if there is fraud.” It’s not clear if Hashemi participated in any of the protests, but her daughter, Faezeh Hashemi, did — and was briefly detained for her actions. Yasaman, a 42-year old housewife, isn’t famous, but she, too, participated in the rallies. She tells RFE/RL that she is now sitting at home, expecting to be detained. “They’re coming for everyone, one by one,” she says. She laughs and says she’s not scared.
Yasaman and many other Iranian women say they voted for Mir Hossein Musavi or fellow reformist Mehdi Karrubi because they were hoping for change. Both of the presidential candidates addressed women’s issues in their campaigns and both promised more rights to Iranian women.
Wife Also Campaigned
Musavi appeared at campaign rallies with his wife, Zahra Rahnavard, a former university chancellor and an adviser to former President Mohammad Khatami. Rahnavard had actively participated in the campaign by giving speeches, interviews, and writing articles. In the last week, she has reportedly met twice with students and told them that Musavi will not give up his defense of people’s rights.
Iranian President Mahmud Ahmadinejad also pledged to grant women more rights and is said to have had some support among women. One of Ahamdinejad’s staunchest supporters is Fatemeh Rajabi, a hard-line female journalist and wife of government spokesman Fatemeh Rajabi. Yet a number of women told RFE/RL that they cast their ballot on June 12 just to say “no” to Ahmadinejad, whom they described as being “antiwoman” and “antifreedom.” Prominent Tehran-based women’s-rights activist Nasrin Sotoudeh tells RFE/RL that she believes women have many good reasons to protest against Ahmadinejad’s reelection. “In the past four years, not only women’s gatherings came under attack,” Sotoudeh says. “[Many women] were repeatedly summoned by the judiciary and put on trial. They faced long jail terms, but they also faced serious problems because of their appearance and they were constantly attacked and beaten up.”
During last week’s demonstrations in Tehran and other cities, women of all ages and segments of society were seen at the forefront of the protests. Some were holding banners; chanting slogans; defying police. Some were seen beating back Basij militia and plainclothes agents who were attacking protestors with sticks.
A video of a young Iranian girl kicking a member of the riot police was making the rounds. In one picture of the recent unrest, a woman in chador is seen running to protect a man who is being beaten by baton-wielding security forces.
Active Roles
Zahra Gholamipour, the leader of Iran’s Pan-Iranist party, tells RFE/RL that women in Iran have always played an active role in society, despite the discrimination they face. “Iranian woman are not the type of women who remain silent and consider themselves lesser than men — even though, unfortunately, after the revolution, [women’s rights] have been violated,” she says. “Today, we see that women are ahead of men in these rightful protests.” Gholamipour, who participated in some of last week’s protests, says that during some rallies women outnumbered men.
Women in Iran face considerable legal discrimination. For example, they don’t have equal rights in divorce and child custody, and they are not allowed to travel outside the country without the permission of their fathers or husbands. But eyewitnesses say that when it came to the crackdown, security forces treated the protesters equally. Women were beaten up — brutally in some cases. And women are among the 23 or so reported so far killed in the postelection unrest. “Iranian women showed again how strong they are,” says Gholamipour. “Many times they were beaten up with electric sticks, but they would come back and [defy] the police. These women are mothers, they are sisters. These women feel responsible.”
No matter what results from the current crisis, both Gholamipour and Sotoudeh believe that women, who make up about 65 percent of Iran’s university students, will keep pushing for more rights. Some have already come up with a new slogan: “Our Neda, Our Voice.”
17 June 2009
AIB’s knowledge network partner, Cambridge-based Broadband TV News, publishes a variety of reports on markets across Europe.
Order them each online via the AIB online store. Click on the titles for more information.
German Market Report
Poland Market Report
UK and Ireland Market Report
17 June 2009
AIB’s knowledge network partner, Cambridge-based Broadband TV News, publishes a range of reports about media markets across Europe.
Three reports – covering Germany, Poland, and the UK & Ireland – are now available through the AIB online shop.
See
here for details and to order.