CGTN Arabic

CGTN Arabic (Arabic: سي جي تي أن العربية), formerly CCTV-Arabic (Arabic: سي سي تي في العربية), is an Arabic language television channel owned by China Global Television Network, a subsidiary of China Central Television.

CGTN Arabic
Logo of the channel starting 2017.
CountryChina
Broadcast areaWorldwide
HeadquartersBeijing, China
Programming
Language(s)Arabic
Picture format576i (16:9 SDTV)
Ownership
OwnerChina Global Television Network
(subsidiary of China Central Television)
Sister channels
History
LaunchedJuly 25, 2009 (2009-07-25)
Former namesCCTV-Arabic (2009–2016)
Links
Websitearabic.cgtn.com
Availability
Satellite
Badr-6 (Middle East)11785 V / 27500 / 3/4 (SD)
Nilesat 201 (Middle East)12015 V / 27500 / 5/6 (SD)
Eutelsat 9B (Europe)11996 V / 27500 / 3/4 (SD)
Apstar-7 (China)3831 H / 15050 / 3/4 (C-Band / SD)
Chinasat-6B (China)4116 H / 21374 / 3/4 (C-Band / SD)
OSN (MENA)Channel 461 (SD)
IPTV
Maroc Telecom (Morocco)Channel 107 (SD)
Streaming media
CNTV Ai Bugu (China)Watch live (SD)

Launch

On July 25, 2009, CCTV launched its Arabic-language international channel, stating that it aims to maintain stronger links with Arabic nations and that the new channel will "serve as an important bridge to strengthen communication and understanding between China and Arab countries".[1] The free-to-air channel reaches the Middle East and North Africa by Arabsat BADR-6 and Nilesat 201, Europe by Eurobird 9 and Asia-Pacific region by Chinasat 6B. The channel is also broadcast in traditional and high-definition format on its official website arabic.cctv.com. CCTV also has plans for a Russian-language channel.[2] The channel is open for view to an audience of potentially 300 million in 22 countries, through the use of satellite television.[2]

Development and Funding

The South China Morning Post reported that CCTV was prepared to spend 45 billion yuan (US$9.5 billion) into the development of the channel, a claim unconfirmed by official sources.[2]

Content

The channel broadcasts entirely in Arabic, with programs from the four categories of news, feature stories, entertainment and education. Each program is broadcast six times per day, while news reports are regularly updated. The channel will gradually increase the number of programs as it develops.[1]

See also

References


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