Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Eri-TV has a large viewership base outside of Eritrea, which the state-run channel acknowledges and utilizes to communicate with Eritreans living abroad. The network has an estimated 1–2 million weekly viewers. Eri-TV recognizes Eritrean Minority Culture and has largely adopted an equal time share between each of the country's spoken languages.
Eri-TV has fully featured programming in four languages: Arabic, English, Tigre, Tigrinya; as well as some programming in other languages including Amharic, Oromo and Somali. Eri-TV is available within Eritrea and abroad via satellite dish 24 hours a day. Many of the television owners in Eritrea use satellite dishes.
Eri-TV This page was last edited on 10 July 2022, at 12:34 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution ... Category: Television channels in Eritrea.
Eritrean Airlines, the Eritrean Telecommunications Corporation, and other companies are headquartered in the city. [39] The country's national television station Eri-TV has many studios located in various areas in the capital. Asmara Brewery, built 1939 under the name of Melotti, is located in the city and employs 600 people. [40]
TV Brasil — Rio de Janeiro, Brasília, São Paulo and broadcast affiliates; TV Brasil Internacional — Available in Africa, Americas, Portugal and Japan by cable and satellite; TV Brasil Play; Rádio Nacional — Rio de Janeiro, Brasília (also available in Belo Horizonte, Recife and São Paulo), North Region and Tabatinga
Eritrean authorities have suspended all flights by Ethiopian Airlines to the East African nation effective Sept. 30, the airline said on Wednesday. Flights from Ethiopia to Eritrea had resumed in ...
Seyoum Tsehaye (born 1952) is a jailed Eritrean journalist. At independence in 1993, Tsehaye was named to the head of Eri-TV, the Eritrean state broadcaster. [1] He was arrested in September 2001 when President Isaias Afewerki closed all non-governmental media sources.
Vanessa Tsehaye was born to Eritrean parents in 1996 in Sweden, where she grew up. [2] In 2001, Vanessa was told about the arrest of her maternal uncle Seyoum Tsehaye, [4] a former head of Eritrean public television Eri-TV. [2] [5] Vanessa describes being perplexed by the arrest. She started to collect money at her high school, hoping to pay ...