Television in Syria
Television in Syria was formed in 1960, when Syria and Egypt (which adopted television that same year) were part of the
Syrian Arab Television and Radio Broadcasting Commission (SATRBC) which is connected to the Ministry of Information
. It has 4,800 staff; both government employees and freelancers.
Since the start of the
Arabsat and Nilesat to stop broadcasting Syrian media in June 2012.[2][3] On April 27, 2013, Al Jazeera Media Network announced that it was suspending indefinitely its activities throughout Syria because of alleged intimidation and threats against its staff.[4]
List of channels
Satellite channels
- Addounia TV (defunct)
- Arrai TV (defunct)
- Cham TV (defunct)
- Lana TV
- Lana Plus TV
- El Khabar TV
- Massaya TV
- Sama TV
- ORTAS
- Noor Al-Sham
- Syria TV
- Syrian Drama TV
- Syrian Education TV
- Syrian Medical TV (defunct)
- Syrian News Channel
- Talaqie TV (defunct)
- Spacetoon (shut down in Syria)
Regional channels
- Rojava TV (Kurdish)
- Ronahî TV (Kurdish)
- Manbij Tv (Kurdish) (defunct)
- Nosor TV (defunct)
- Syria Baladna (defunct)
Terrestrial channels
- Channel 1 (Arabicfocus) (defunct)
- Channel 2(Sport, family and health focus including regional variants) (defunct)
Rebel media
Satellite channels
- Aleppo Today, based in Istanbul, Turkey[5]
- Syria al-shaab(defunct)
- Suriya al-Ghad (defunct)
- Al-Jisr TV (defunct)
References
- TheGuardian.com. 10 February 2013.
- ^ Blocking of Syrian television is justified – The National
- ^ Syrian president to address parliament in 1st speech since January - 6/3/2012 2:36:55 AM | Newser[permanent dead link]
- ^ "Syria". Reporters Without Borders. Archived from the original on 2010-09-25.
- ^ a b c "Syria media guide". BBC News. 28 August 2011. Retrieved 22 May 2023.
- ^ "Syria's media war". Columbia Journalism Review.
- ^ "أورينت نت - الصفحة الرئيسية".
- ^ https://www.syria.tv/
- user-generated source]