Over the past year, various actors in Lebanon were in the midst of a heated debate over a new media law as the country’s disputes played out in the media and concerns over telecommunications infiltration continued to be voiced.
Over the past year, various actors in Lebanon were in the midst of a heated debate over a new media law as the country’s disputes played out in the media and concerns over telecommunications infiltration continued to be voiced.
The Syrian media sector is schizophrenic. On the one hand, Syrian musalsalat (television serials) are considered the best in the Arab world and compete head-to-head with their famed Egyptian counterparts. On the other hand, Syrian news and public affairs programming wallows in a protracted crisis exacerbated by an increasingly hostile geopolitical context and the Syrian-Lebanese media war.
After years of rhetoric about the need for a pan-Arab satellite television framework, Arab information ministers on February 12, 2008 adopted a charter that provides the tools to penalize broadcasters who attack leaders or air socially unacceptable content.