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Afghanistan gets entertainment television

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   http://au.news.yahoo.com/040527/11/p6y4.html

http://au.news.yahoo.com/040527/11/p6y4.html

Thursday May 27, 10:44 PM

First Afghan Entertainment TV Channel Goes on Air
KABUL (Reuters) - Afghanistan has its first entertainment television channel, three years after the fall of the radical Taliban regime that banned the medium.
Using a mobile antenna positioned on a hill overlooking the capital, the broadcast range of "Afghan TV" station only covers Kabul city, but its owner, Ahmad Shah Afghanzai, hopes to widen its range across the country in a year's time.

"Within a year we hope to be watched all over the country through a satellite station," he told Reuters.

Afghanzai, a 34-year-old businessman, has invested $200,000 in the nascent private operation, and needs nearly $3 million to expand it to cover the whole of the country.

"Hopefully, with the help of others, we can achieve this. We are not charging viewers and plan to run advertisements to cover the costs," he said.

"Commercial interests and people's demand for entertainment made me come up with this idea," he added.

The fledgling station airs mostly Indian and Western songs as well as films for nearly sixteen hours each day.

"It's really fun to watch," said Timoor, a Kabul resident, of the new channel. "You have girls and boys dancing and singing...It is a totally new phenomenon when you compare it with government-controlled TV."

State-owned Kabul TV is currently the only Afghan channel on air.

The birth of "Afghan TV" comes less than three years after television, cinema and music were banned by the Taliban, a hardline Islamic movement that imposed a strict interpretation of Sharia law.

A U.S.-led military campaign using local Afghan ground forces overthrew the Taliban in late 2001, more than five years after it swept to power.

Information and Culture Minister Sayed Makhdoom Raheen said President Hamid Karzai's government had no intention of censoring the new channel, so long as its broadcasts did not contravene Islamic law and Afghan culture.

Raheen is among a handful of liberals in Karzai's government, which still contains many members of mujahideen or "holy warriors" factions, who tend to be religious conservatives.

He was criticized by government hard-liners after allowing songs by local female artists to be aired earlier this year, ending a ban on such broadcasts imposed in 1992.

The conservatives managed to stop the airing of the songs briefly, but Raheen won the battle in the end.




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