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including 2 TV relay stations with French and Vietnamese broadcasts; excludes 18 regional relay stations: 2006 102 Uganda: 8: plus 1 repeater: 2001 103 Kyrgyzstan: 8: 2 countrywide and 6 regional stations, state-owned; there are about 20 private TV stations, most of which rebroadcast other channels: 2007 104 Kenya: 75 FTA: 2018 105 Laos: 7
Name Owner Description Language Availability Arte Belgique: Cooperation between RTBF and ARTE: Cultural network: French: Cable networks in Wallonia, Brussels and Flanders Satellite
African Cable Television - commenced operations on 1 December 2014; operations were discontinued a few months later; CTL; Daarsat; DStv [4] [5] - Other networks like HiTV (out of operations) and StarTimes have increased the competitiveness of the cable TV market. [6] [7] GOtv [8] KAFTAN TV; Kwese TV - discontinued its DTH operation in 2019 [9 ...
This is a list of television stations in Africa. Many African countries have various television stations both public and private in nature. The management of these stations vary across countries. In some parts of Africa, radio is a more common form of news and media; see the list of radio stations in Africa for more information.
1994 - 2004 (1994 - 2002 as SZCATV-4 Finance Information Channel), replaced by Shenzhen Satellite TV OTV News & Entertainment channel China: Chinese 2001 - 2007, replaced by SMG Entertainment Channel (Now is SMG City TV) XMTV News & Information Channel China: Chinese
The money in cable is now going into linear sports, which is not the kind of TV program that can be sold in markets around the world for a high price, the way “ER,” “Seinfeld,” “Law ...
Africa is turning out to be an unlikely market for Chinese television producers, according to one production executive. Hou Hong Liang, chairman of Chinese television production company Daylight ...
TVAfrica was a pan-African television network founded in 1998 by former advertising executive Dave Kelly alongside sports broadcaster Berry Lambert. [4] The network relayed up to 80% of its content to private television stations in sub-Saharan Africa and also licensed the broadcast of sporting events (excluding South Africa due to licensing regulations) [5] to interested broadcasters.