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essential question at hand
in this seminarthe complex state of the Arab satellite broadcasting industry,
and its relations with Mediterranean neighborswas "phrased" in various ways
by different panels, with the net effect of a more complete picture of the regional
situation. First on the table was a geographic breakdown, going against the idea
of a cohesive, essentialized "pan-Arab" broadcasting system with a panel examining
the specificities of the Maghreb, Egypt, the Gulf countries, and transnational
channels. Another way to phrase the question is "public versus private": officials
from both government-run and from privately operated channels discussed the difference
in their perspectives and concerns, plus current hot topics like the media free
zones cropping up in Egypt and Dubai. A yet more honed-in panel examined thematic
bouquets, relationships between cinema and television, and reaching expatriate
and minority audiences, while an even wider perspective looked at Arab-European
cooperation with questions like marketing Arabic programming on European bouquets.
The idea of organizing
a conference on the new challenges for satellite television in the Arab world
emerged during the first meetings of the Biennale des Cinemas Arabes a Paris.
The Biennale, which is now the most important Arabic film festival in Europe,
presents every two years a thematic conference on a subject related to cinema.
During a visit to the Middle East, Magda Wassef, president of the Biennale, felt
the enthusiasm of all the TV decision-makers in the Gulf countries for such a
conference and such a subject. In fact, it was the positive attitude of people
from Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Kuwait, and Bahrain that led the Institut du Monde Arabe
to organize the conference.
This meeting was supposed
to be an Euro-Arab conference but due to a lack of time for the organization it
became a French-Arab event. Perhaps that was fortuitous: a French-Arab perspective
meant we could hone in on the particular bond between France and the Arab region
in terms of viewing preferences and audience demographics. It was easy to convince
French television presidents to attend the conference; most of them already have
strong relationships with Arab partners. Jean Stock, president of TV5 and CFI,
was in Cairo in March 2000 for meetings and is aiming to increase his audience
in the Arab world. Philippe Cayla, the former Eutelsat international manager and
newly appointed head of the international department of France Television, is
very aware that the Arab world will be one of the important challenges for the
development of France Television International. Jerome Clement, president of La
Cinquieme La Sept ARTE, is hoping to finalize two important projects, a French
Moroccan channel and a French Egyptian Channel. Canal+ Horizon, the subsidiary
of French Canal+, is also interested in increasing its audience.
Camille Cabana, president
of the Institut du Monde Arabe, said that the Institut's role encompasses not
only organizing exhibitions on Arab heritage but also showing the achievements
of Arab countries in new communication and information technologies. Part of this,
he added, is helping to strengthen the links between Arab television and European
multimedia groups.
As soon as conference
organizers started working on the list of participants, we knew it would be difficult
to convince all the Arab countries to send a delegation to Paris. We wanted very
much to have people from all the countries of the region; for us the presence
of not only regional media powerhouses like Egypt and Dubai but also representatives
from countries like Sudan, Libya, Yemen, Oman, and Palestine was very important,
to hear how they view their presence and role in regional satellite TV.
I won't give the details
of weeks of contacts, phone calls, and faxes with which any conference organizer
is all too familiar. I was, personally, disappointed by the absence of a Saudi
delegation from either official state-owned TV or private companies, and the absence
of Lebanese private organizations like Future and LBC. Participants, though, represented
a broad range of Arab broadcasting interests, regions, and perspectives: Omar
Shoter and Said Abdallah Al-Qahtani, vice presidents of Arabsat; Muhammed
Jasim al-Ali, managing director of Qatar's Al-Jazeera Channel; Michel Gabriel
El Murr, president of MTV in Lebanon; Hussein Amin and Hazem Foda of the Egyptian
Radio and Television Union; Amer Aoun, secretary of state for television for the
Libyan Ministry of Culture; and the list goes on.
Our goal was to run the
event along the lines of real partnership and cooperationthat means that
all the participants were aware of the importance of dialogue. There were no official
speeches; instead we noticed a lot of constructive proposals. No one came with
a sense of superiority, and I think that was one of the reasons for the success
of the conference. We encouraged an atmosphere in which participants felt free
to speak and to give a realistic description of the situation. People were able
to express different opinions and to criticize. There was no political aim, but
the goal of letting people exchange points of view and ideas.
Ironically, participants
talked for two days about the future of television without watching a single image.
That seems in retrospect to be one weak point which we should improve for the
next meeting. For future meetingsand indeed one outcome of the conference
was the suggestion to strengthen the relationship between French and Arab television
decision-makers and make this a yearly eventwe must organize screenings
of TV programs, workshops, and other venues in which we can delve deeper into
the exchange of ideas and projects. For the future we also wish to include more
of the people who bring professionalism to this field. It was unfortunate, for
example, that due to our late invitation Peter Einstein,
CEO of Gulf DTH/Showtime, was unable to come to Paris, and nor was Sheikh Saleh
Kamel of ART able to attend. We welcome their participationand that of other
industry colleaguesat future events. TBS
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Also
in our three-part coverage of the colloquium "Actors and New Stakes in the
Euro-Arab Satellite Scene":
"Does Satellite TV Pay in the Arab World Footprint? Exploring the Economic
Feasibility of Specialized and General Channels" by TBS Senior Editor
S. Abdallah Schleifer, a paper presented at the colloquium
"The Current Situation of Satellite Broadcasting in the Middle East"
An extract from a speech presented by TBS Senior Editor Hussein Y. Amin at the
colloquium
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