Baghdad Television
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Country | Iraq |
|---|---|
| Broadcast area | National |
| Programming | |
| Language | Arabic |
| Ownership | |
| Owner | Government of Iraq |
| History | |
| Founded | 1956 |
| Launched | 2 May 1956 |
| Closed | 23 April 2003 (46 years, 11 months and 21 days) |
| Replaced by | Al Iraqiya |
Baghdad Television (Arabic: تلفزيون بغداد, romanized: tilfizyun baghdad, lit. 'Baghdad Television Station') (BTV) or known as Iraqi TV (Arabic: التلفزيون العراقي, romanized: altilfizyun aleiraqiu, lit. 'Iraqi Television') was the first Iraqi television channel which was in operation from 2 May 1956 until 13 April 2003 after the fall of Baghdad.
Since 2003, BTV was an off-air station which was replaced by Al-Iraqiya.
Television first arrived in Iraq on 2 May 1956, at first only in the Baghdad area with a station named Baghdad Television (BTV) on channel 8, switching to channel 9 in November 1959 after an increasing of its power. On 18 November 1967 the second TV station opened in Kirkuk,[1] on 2 March 1968 a new transmitter had been opened in Mosul and on 6 November 1968 in Basrah.[2] The first test color broadcasts in Iraq began in 1968.
On 30 July 1972, Baghdad Television opened its second TV station on channel 7, and in 1974 two new stations opened in Amarah (capital city of the Maysan Governorate) and Samawah (capital city of the Muthanna Governorate), the latter one opening in March.[3] In July 1976, full-colour television was introduced using the French SECAM system.[4][5] By 1976, the entire country could receive broadcasts from the central station in Baghdad after the installation of a microwave relay system.[citation needed]
Baghdad Television was the primary TV station[6] in Iraq while Saddam Hussein was in power. Until the 2003 invasion of Iraq, much of its programming was patriotic music videos, government news and propaganda. It ceased broadcasting during the 2003 invasion when the transmitter network became inoperable due to bombing raids.[citation needed]
A second TV channel was established on 30 July 1972 broadcasting on channel 7 in the Baghdad area.[3] The channel was renamed Youth Channel (Qanaat Al-Shabaab) on 17 July 1993 and broadcast subtitled Western movies and music videos before the 2003 invasion. Foreign programmes were censored to remove strong language, sex and violence so programming would be suitable for all ages. Other channels available included Baghdad Cultural TV, Al-Shabaab 2 and Iraq Satellite Channel.[citation needed]
Because BTV was free to air, it also received a substantial amount of attention from viewers outside Iraq, particularly during the 2003 invasion of the country.[citation needed]