Mercredi 30 octobre 2013. Le canal de TV AL-MAYADEEN, basé au - TopicsExpress



          

Mercredi 30 octobre 2013. Le canal de TV AL-MAYADEEN, basé au Liban, s’avère une antenne de propagande pour le régime syrien de Bachar ASSAD, et le réseau Iran-Baath Syrien-Hezbollah. Il représente un danger de déstabilisations supplémentaires sur le peuple libanais, par ses déformations des faits et l’inclusion d’orientations en faveur de la ‘gloire’ du régime tyrannique de Bachar Assad. Ce canal basé à Beyrouth signale les horaires de ses programmes en fonction des heures à Jérusalem, comme si l’important dans le crâne de ses dirigeants serait une guerre prochaine pour Jérusalem, probablement pour la gloire d’une religion sans savoir laquelle. Décidément, le peuple libanais appauvri n’a rien à faire que e subir des endoctrinements pour aller à la guerre au lieu de chercher la paix et la nourriture. Le Liban est devenu un pays de fous. « « AL MAYADEEN TV Channel, for who ? For what ? Ownership and offices[edit] The channel is part of Al Mayadeen satellite media network, including a production company, a radio station, a website, an advertising company and other media-related projects.[4] It is stated that the owners of the channel are anonymous Arab businessmen.[5] There are speculations about the funding of the channel. Western media claim that the channel is a propaganda platform for Iran and Hezbollah and is funded by them.[1] Omar Ibhais, a freelance Lebanese TV producer, argued that the channel is a joint venture between the Iranians and Rami Makhlouf, cousin of Syrian President Bashar Assad.[6] However, Ghassan bin Jiddo, director of the channel, denied this allegation and stated that the channel is funded by Arab businessmen whose identity he would not disclose.[1] The headquarters of the channel is in Beirut.[7] It has a wide-ranging news network and three regional offices, one in Tunisia, another in Cairo with three reporters and a big studio, and a third in Tehran.[5] Staff[edit] Ghassan bin Jiddo is the head of the board of directors and program director of the channel.[5] He is the former head of Al Jazeera’s Iran and Beirut offices and a former talk show host in the channel.[4][8] He resigned from the Qatar-based Al Jazeera in 2011, criticizing its reporting of the Syrian civil war.[1] Jiddo clearly accused Al Jazeera of deviating from the professional broadcasting standards, emphasizing that Al Mayadeen would remain objective and unbiased.[2] Nayef Krayem, the owner of the Lebanon-based Al Ittihad TV and former director of the Hezbollah-affiliated Al Manar TV, was designated as the general manager of the channel,[9] but he resigned one month before its launch. The staff of the channel include Lebanese journalists such as Sami Kulaib whose wife Luna Shibl is the media advisor to Syrian President Bashar Assad,[10] Ali Hashem, the former Al Jazeera war correspondent, who resigned from the Qatari channel for claims it refused to broadcast footage of militants on the Lebanese Syrian borders in the early days of the Syrian uprising,[4][8] Zahi Wehbe,[11] Lina Zahreddine, Lana Mudawwar, Muhammad Alloush, Ahmad Abu Ali and Dina Zarkat. Additionally, two Syrian journalists, Ramia Ibrahim and Futoun Abbasi, and two Palestinian journalists Kamal Khalaf and Ahmad Sobh as well as Yemeni Mona Safwan are also among its staff.[5] Like Jiddo, most of the channels staff are the former Al Jazeera correspondents and editors.[12] George Galloway, a British MP, also works for the channel.[1] The channel has a network of reporters in Palestine (specifically, in Gaza and Ramallah) and also, in Jerusalem.[5] Their task is reported to provide the channel with a daily news section in the news broadcast entitled “A Window Into Palestine.”[5] In addition, there are reporters of the channel in Amman, Tripoli, Rabbat, Khartoum, Mauritania and Comoros.[5] en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al_Mayadeen >>
Posted on: Wed, 30 Oct 2013 15:44:32 +0000

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