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Iraq was home to the first television station in the Middle East, which began during the 1950s. As part of a plan to help Iraq modernize, English telecommunications company Pye Limited built and commissioned a television broadcast station in the capital city of Baghdad. Following the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq, the Iraqi state media collapsed. In June 2004, a Communications and Media Commission was set up to approve and grant license for all the country's media. By 2011, Iraq was the headquarters of 49 free-to-air satellite channels, one of the highest numbers in the region. Until 2003, satellite dishes were banned in Iraq, and there was a limited number of national terrestrial stations. After 2003, the sale of satellite dishes surged, and free-to-air channels entered the market. There a

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  • هذه قائمة بالقنوات العراقية التلفزيونية عبر التاريخ: (ar)
  • Iraq was home to the first television station in the Middle East, which began during the 1950s. As part of a plan to help Iraq modernize, English telecommunications company Pye Limited built and commissioned a television broadcast station in the capital city of Baghdad. Following the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq, the Iraqi state media collapsed. In June 2004, a Communications and Media Commission was set up to approve and grant license for all the country's media. By 2011, Iraq was the headquarters of 49 free-to-air satellite channels, one of the highest numbers in the region. Until 2003, satellite dishes were banned in Iraq, and there was a limited number of national terrestrial stations. After 2003, the sale of satellite dishes surged, and free-to-air channels entered the market. There are 17 terrestrial channels, of which one is funded by the US government through the U.S. Agency for Global Media (Alhurra-Iraq), and seven are owned by the state broadcaster Iraqi Media Network. In March 2011, Al Jazeera was granted rights to resume operations after being banned in 2004. Plans were established to set up a free-media zone based in Baghdad, the Baghdad Media City, by the end of 2014. (en)
  • Após a invasão do Iraque em 2003, a mídia estatal iraquiana entrou em colapso. Em junho de 2004, uma Comissão de Comunicação e Mídia foi criada para aprovar e conceder licenças para toda a mídia do país. Em 2011, o Iraque era sede principal de 49 canais de satélite de sinal aberto, um dos maiores números da região. Até 2003, as antenas parabólicas foram proibidas e havia um número limitado de estações terrestres nacionais no país. Depois de 2003, a venda de antenas parabólicas subiu e os canais abertos entraram no mercado. Existem 16 canais terrestres, dos quais três são propriedade da emissora estatal Iraqi Media Network, financiada pelos Estados Unidos. Em março de 2011, a Al Jazeera recebeu o direito de restabelecer as operações no país, depois de ter sido banida em 2004. Há planos para estabelecer uma zona livre de mídia com base em Bagdá, a Cidade de Mídia de Bagdá, que deve ser concluída no final de 2014. (pt)
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  • هذه قائمة بالقنوات العراقية التلفزيونية عبر التاريخ: (ar)
  • Iraq was home to the first television station in the Middle East, which began during the 1950s. As part of a plan to help Iraq modernize, English telecommunications company Pye Limited built and commissioned a television broadcast station in the capital city of Baghdad. Following the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq, the Iraqi state media collapsed. In June 2004, a Communications and Media Commission was set up to approve and grant license for all the country's media. By 2011, Iraq was the headquarters of 49 free-to-air satellite channels, one of the highest numbers in the region. Until 2003, satellite dishes were banned in Iraq, and there was a limited number of national terrestrial stations. After 2003, the sale of satellite dishes surged, and free-to-air channels entered the market. There a (en)
  • Após a invasão do Iraque em 2003, a mídia estatal iraquiana entrou em colapso. Em junho de 2004, uma Comissão de Comunicação e Mídia foi criada para aprovar e conceder licenças para toda a mídia do país. Em 2011, o Iraque era sede principal de 49 canais de satélite de sinal aberto, um dos maiores números da região. Até 2003, as antenas parabólicas foram proibidas e havia um número limitado de estações terrestres nacionais no país. Depois de 2003, a venda de antenas parabólicas subiu e os canais abertos entraram no mercado. (pt)
rdfs:label
  • Television in Iraq (en)
  • قائمة القنوات التلفزية العراقية (ar)
  • Televisão no Iraque (pt)
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