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The list is a list of television channels and stations in the Arab World, as well as Arab-based Western television channels. The majority, if not all, of these channels, are chiefly in Arabic . Africa
A. Abu Dhabi TV; Abu Dhabi TV (Canada) Addounia TV; Afaq TV; Aghapy TV; Al Aan TV; Al Ahly TV; Al-Alam News Network; Al Aoula; Al-Aqsa TV; Al-Arab News Channel; Al Arabiya
Prima Sport is a Romanian network of sports channels owned and operated by the media group Clever. The package includes four channels called Prima Sport 1, Prima Sport 2, Prima Sport 3, Prima Sport 4, and Prima Sport 5. It was launched in 2011, under the name Transilvania L!VE and after other names, the channels became Prima Sport on April 19 ...
BBC Arabic can also be seen via bbc.co.uk/Arabic/. The website includes a 16:9 live stream of the channel. The channel broadcasts 24 hours a day, showing live news programmes mixed with current affairs programmes, documentaries and occasional light entertainment. Newshour, an hour-long news bulletin is broadcast every evening at 18:00 GMT.
MyTV provides Arabic-language Live TV Channels and Video on Demand (VOD) everywhere in the Americas as well as Europe, Australia and New Zealand. The myTV service helps expatriates and people-on-the-move feel closer to their homeland, by giving them access to the channels they love, and the TV shows, movies or music videos they miss, straight ...
Al Araby Television Network (Arabic: شبكة التلفزيون العربي) is a general television network launched in January 2015, and includes two main channels "Alaraby TV" and "Alaraby 2", in addition to digital projects that broadcast exclusive programs such as "Ana Alaraby" and "Alaraby Tube".
Prima TV was launched as one of the first commercial television stations in Romania in December 1997 at 19:00. Until then, on its frequency was known AMEROM CANAL 38 or TeleAmerica. Prima TV was owned and operated by Prima Broadcasting Group, from 2013 to 2020. In 2020, Clever Group acquired Prima TV.
It was the third television station to sign on in Saudi Arabia, after Aramco TV (1957) and AJL-TV (1955). The introduction of a national service was seen with controversy from conservative Islamic clerics, believing that television was the "devil's handiwork". The first regular broadcast of Saudi Television was a reading of the Qur'an. [4]