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- Newsgroups: soc.culture.lebanon
- Path: sparky!uunet!mcsun!sunic!aun.uninett.no!nuug!nntp.uio.no!news
- From: eliedw@hedda.uio.no (Elie Dib Wardini)
- Subject: LEBANON'S PRIME MINISTER BUILDS UP MEDIA
- Message-ID: <1992Nov21.113545.27412@ulrik.uio.no>
- Sender: news@ulrik.uio.no (Mr News)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: hf-mac21.uio.no
- Organization: UiO
- Date: Sat, 21 Nov 1992 11:35:45 GMT
- Lines: 65
-
-
- From LEbNEt archives
- posted without permission
-
- Subject: ANALYSIS: LEBANON'S PRIME MINISTER BUILDS UP MEDIA ...
-
- By ALI JABER
- BEIRUT (NOV. 20) DPA - After adding political power to his enormous financial
- strength, Rafik Hariri, Lebanon's new prime minister, is on his way to becoming
- the Arab world's media tycoon.
- Hariri, 48, who was appointed prime minister last month in the hope that he
- would lift Lebanon from chaos and economic hardship, has begun to acquire
- magazines, newspapers, television and radio stations and last but not least, an
- international wire service.
- His aides told the German Press Agency dpa that negotiations have already
- started with the Middle East Broadcasting Center (MBC), the London-based Saudi
- company now owning United Press International (UPI), to buy the ailing news
- agency.
- According to Hariri's media team, which is working under a holding company
- named Wave, or Word Audio Visual Enterprise, MBC has proposed that half of the
- UPI shares be sold to the prime minister.
- But they added that Hariri still insisted on negotiating to acquire the whole
- of UPI and had pledged to provide 20 million dollars upfront investment to
- rehabilitate the agency's battered technological infrastructure and lift its
- performance to competitive levels.
- In the meantime, the Wave closed a deal last week buying 49 per cent of the
- shares of Lebanon's only legitimate television station, the partly state-owned
- Tele Liban. They estimated the cost at six million U.S. dollars.
- At the same time, Hariri is also building a new private television station
- named The Future to be opened by the begining of next year with capacity to
- broadcast to Syria, Israel, Jordan and the coast of Eygpt.
- An estimated 12 million dollars have gone to The Future television so far,
- all devoted to buying state of the art equipment, hiring skilled personnel and
- planning for satellite broadcast to Europe and the U.S.
- The television station, based in his hometown of Sidon in southern Lebanon,
- will complement the already booming business of Radio Orient, Hariri's radio
- station which beams its programmes on frequency modulation from Paris to the
- Middle East, Africa, Europe and the United States.
- Hariri has also bought the prestigious Paris-based magazine al-Mustakbal and
- reserved its entire staff for a planned re-publication by the begining of the
- year.
- An 18th century building in the heart of Beirut is being renovated to house
- the desks and publishing house of Voice of Arabism, the newspaper which Hariri
- bought two years ago and is planning to publish also by the turn of the year.
- Wave officials said two highrise towers currently under construction in
- Beirut will become by 1995 the media headquarters of Hariri group. One would
- house the audio visual media and the other the printing press and desks of the
- newspaper and magazine.
- Sources close to Hariri said the Lebanese-born Saudi financier was
- contemplating buying the Daily Star, Beirut's only English-language daily and
- another French newspaper based in Paris.
- The man himself believes in building a friendly media network that can assist
- him in his newly-starting political career and propagate his political thoughts
- and programme.
- Hariri told dpa that he seeks through his press empire to protect Lebanon
- from reckless press coverage which could ruin relationships with its neighbours
- and the Arab countries and to carve the ideas of coexistence and tolerance into
- the Lebanese mentality.
- Hariri believes that Lebanon's problems in soliciting Arab funds for its
- reconstruction stem from the fact that its press can sometimes be hostile to
- Arab regimes.
- "I need a press that can compliment my work in building a healthy country,
- not sabotage my job," he said.
-
-
-