Anti-Tehran channel launches in London amid ban on Iranian state TV
A
new Iranian TV station has started broadcasting from London, aiming
to be a platform for opposition to Iran's current leadership. The
launch comes just over a week after 19 state-run Iranian TV and radio
stations were banned in the EU.
RT,
25
October, 2012
Raha
TV is a brainchild of Amir Hossein Jahanchahi, a businessman who fled
to Europe in 2003 and whose father was a finance minister during the
pre-revolutionary government.
In
Farsi, 'raha' means freedom – and that could give an indication of
the political agenda behind the new station.
Jahanchahi
denies having any financial support from international organizations.
He told RT he wants to help the Iranian people to “decapitate
the current regime,” as
his channel is “for
the change of the dictatorship.”
While
starting up his channel, Jahanchahi said he was inspired by the
examples of Al-Jazeera and Al Arabiya, which played significant roles
during the Arab Spring uprisings.
Meanwhile,
Iran will hold a presidential election next June.
At
first, Raha will be on-air for only three and a half hours a day,
with a 30-minute news show and three hours of culture block.
But
in Iran the voice will not be heard – the Iranian government has
blocked the channel's signal and Internet feed.
The
launch of a new channel in Britain, where another Iranian TV channel,
Press TV, was banned from the airwaves this January, brought calls of
British hypocrisy.
Author
and journalist Afshin Rattansi says Britain is “glad
to welcome a propaganda channel run by the one percentage, while no
one in Iran – even those who oppose Ahmadinejad” will
support the new opposition channel.
Press
TV was later closed in the EU due to the latest and toughest-yet
round of sanctions by the bloc, the US and their allies.
But
the founder of Raha TV believes his channel will not face the same
fate as Press TV.
“If
tomorrow they don’t want me to be here, I will go to Paris, or to
Madrid. If they don’t want I will go to Washington. If they don’t
want, I will go to Russia. It is not important where,” Jahanchahi
said.
Ironically,
Raha TV is broadcast through European satellite provider Eutelsat,
the agency that blacked
out the 19 state-run Iranian TV and radio stations.
Investigative
journalist Tony Gosling says viewers are being stripped of the chance
to hear both sides of the story.
“The
ultimate thing here is it should be up to the viewers to decide, not
for the people who own those satellites. We need that freedom of
expression,” he
said. “So
what we’re seeing is a kind of a difference of opinion going on in
different parts of the world, which is based on who is controlling
the satellites in that area,” Gosling
said.
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