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Richard Sambrook

Arabic TV


ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ World Service launches a new channel tomorrow morning - will be adding television to the mix. Initially it will broadcast 12 hours a day, moving to 24 hours later in the year.

World Service logoTogether with our radio and internet services in Arabic, it will form part of the first multimedia offer to the Arab world with programming scheduled across all three media - from the web, to radio, to TV.

Arabic was the first language beyond English the World Service launched 70 years ago. It was also the first language to have its own website. That track record means the ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ is well known and well respected in the region. Since then, of course, the Arab media market has exploded with many hundreds of channels now available. So why should the ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ offer a TV service and what will it be like?

The Arab world is one of the most important regions of the world. Events there affect all of us in some way, from terrorism and war, to oil prices and trade. It is natural therefore that the World Service should seek to reach as many people as possible with its broadcasts - and today that means being on TV which is now the most used medium for news and information.

ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ Arabic channelWe won't, as some have suggested, be seeking to get more viewers than broadcasters like or . As an international broadcaster that is unlikely. However we believe we can be distinctive for Arab audiences offering an international, not just Arab, perspective on events and an objective approach to issues. It will have the same standards and values as any other ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ service, reporting on the rest of the world as well as the region. In surveys in the region, 85% of those asked said they would watch the ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ channel. We hope some 35 million people will be using the service in 5 years time.

Like the rest of the World Service, it is being funded by Grant-in-Aid from the - not the UK licence fee - which has led some of our competitors to suggest the channel will simply be Western propaganda. It won't. As with all World Service programmes, it will be editorially independent - something clearly written into our agreements with the Foreign Office - and will represent the same standards which have made the ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ one of the most trusted broadcasters in the world.

So the ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ Arabic newsroom is ready, the teams are recruited and trained, the pilots are over and from 10:00 (GMT) we go live. Wish us luck.

Here's how to watch:

ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ Arabic television will be free-to-air across North Africa and the Arab world on satellite TV via and , and also visible in the UK on (Transponder 50). It will also be streamed on

On Tuesday, when the new channel goes live, we'll post details here about how to watch online.

ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ Arabic buttonUpdate, Tuesday 11 March: To watch ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ Arabic's live stream online, go to and click on the red button (as pictured here).

Richard Sambrook is director, Global News

Richard Chapman

Stormy forecast


At 5.10am, as I left the house in Folkestone this morning, I had an appreciation of how bad the weather was going to be – I knew from the weekend forecast that the worst would be along the south coast, with breakfast time being the peak and I wasn’t let down. The train into London was buffeted all the way with several pieces of debris on the track causing some concern.

Commuters on the Millenium Bridge, LondonForecasters at the Met Office were alerting us as early as last week, and yesterday the areas for likely disruption were clearly identified. But the gales were not the full story, as the strong winds coincided with spring high tides, increasing the risk of coastal flooding.

At the ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ Weather Centre we have to weigh up the need to give viewers a steer on what is ahead but balance that with crying wolf. On Sunday we were confident that the winds would be strong but exactly who would be in the firing line needed to be watched. The Met Office computer model is run every six hours and with each successive run we monitored the track and intensity, firming up on the forecast.

When I arrived at TV centre the weather team were already in full swing with Matt Taylor on Breakfast and Chris Fawkes on Radio 4.

The winds were expected to continue to gust to 75 to 85mph at times though the rest of today especially in exposed locations. The weather team were reporting on the current weather situation using the latest satellite and radar data with league tables of the highest gusts. Our durations were extended on ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ News 24 to two minutes 30 seconds so that we could provide the additional details required. The worst hit areas were parts of Wales, western and southern parts of England where all emergency services were put on alert.

Rain and high winds in Lyme RegisAs the stormy weather lashed parts of the country, leaving homes without power and disrupting travel, the team kept updating the forecast and bringing the very latest information to viewers on TV, radio, online and mobile. The highest reported gust was 95mph on the Isle of Wight at the time of writing and this news was first to air on the One O’Clock News with Kirsty McCabe.

Very few places escaped the bad weather with northern parts of the UK seeing both rain and snowfall – up to 15cm was forecast over the Scottish Highlands.

As the thunder rumbles around TVC, the word is that more gales are on the way for Wednesday – so keep watching!

Richard Chapman is editorial manager of ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ Weather

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