View Full Version: Al-Jazerra to be offered on Canadian Cable

The Rap Up > The World Today > Al-Jazerra to be offered on Canadian Cable


Title: Al-Jazerra to be offered on Canadian Cable


TriangleOffense - July 16, 2004 03:09 AM (GMT)
Well this is from the CBC so its legit. For those that don't know the CRTC (Canadian Radio and Television Commission) is basically the US FCC.

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OTTAWA - Canadian viewers will soon be able to watch the Arabic Al-Jazeera network, after the federal broadcast regulator on Thursday approved the network's distribution by cable companies.

Cable companies have been eager to pick up the network, known as the CNN of the Arab world, which was already being watched by some Canadians using "grey-market" technology that the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission considers illegal.

Critics of the network, including the Canadian Jewish Congress, have argued that Al-Jazeera broadcasts anti-Semitic programs.

The White House has criticized the network's coverage in the war in Iraq, saying its inaccurate and has an anti-American bias.

In its ruling, the commission said distributors of Al-Jazeera in Canada will be required to guard against the broadcast of "any abusive comment."

Several authoritarian Arab governments have also slammed its coverage and have shut down the channel's offices in several countries.

The network, which broadcasts 24 hours a day from Qatar on the Persian Gulf, regularly receives video and audio tapes said to have come from al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden.

Recently, the network has received videos of hostages in Iraq shown being held or killed by their captors.

This week, Al-Jazeera issued a code of ethics, saying it would distinguish between news, analysis and commentary to avoid "falling in the trap of propaganda and speculation."

It also promised to "acknowledge any mistake as soon as it is made and take the initiative to correct it and avoid repeating it."

The network was founded in 1996 in Qatar.

Its equipment and most of its journalists came from the BBC after it closed down its Arabic-language division.




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