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Arabia
Al Jazeera TV signal jammed in Middle East
2011-02-02
DOHA - Qatar-based news channel Al Jazeera said its signal was being jammed in parts of the Middle East on Tuesday, days after Egypt shut the network's operations in the country and an Egyptian satellite cut its broadcast signal.
Strange times indeed when I have significant sympathy for Al-Jizz...
I heard somebody dismissing al-Jizz on the teevee last night as a propaganda machine. It is, but since it was the first of several Arab news outlets it performs a valuable function. In 2001 that was all there was. Today there's also al-Arabiya, al-Iraqiya, al-Hayat, an-Nahar, and a half dozen others that I'm not aware of because they don't have English-language pages. I'm not always happy with the way al-Jizz weights its coverage, but they're usually factual. Compare them to Iran Press TV or to Syria's al-Thawra, or Saddam's old uruk.net and they shine like a beacon on the hill. Let not the perfect be the enemy of the good.
"Signals on the Nilesat platform were cut, and frequencies on the Arabsat and Hotbird platforms were disrupted continually forcing millions of viewers across the Arab world to change satellite frequencies throughout the day," Al Jazeera said in a statement, referring to a few of the geostationary satellites broadcasting across the region.

"We have been working round the clock to make sure we are broadcasting on alternative frequencies. Clearly there are powers that do not want our important images pushing for democracy and reform to be seen by the public," a Jazeera spokesman said in an emailed statement.

Al Jazeera's coverage of political unrest in Egypt has been widely watched in the region, and the channel said on Tuesday a dozen smaller Arab networks had interrupted their own programmes to carry its signal.

"Over the past week the network has faced multiple attempts to disrupt their coverage from Egypt, with signals being interfered with on a continual basis, and journalists being banned and detained," Al Jazeera said.

The news channel, which says it can reach 220 million households in more than 100 countries, had asked viewers to switch to Arabsat and Hotbird satellites after saying Egypt's satellite Nilesat had cut off its signal.
Posted by:Steve White

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