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Tibet launches 24-hour Tibetan-language TV channel
LHASA—The Tibet Television
Station launched a 24-hour Tibetan-language channel on Monday - the 58th
National Day of China, as the country’s first TV channel broadcasting
around the clock in minority languages.
The new service was upgraded from the previous Tibetan-language channel
which broadcast 21 hours a day, said Gongbu Suolang, deputy
editor-in-chief with the Tibet TV Station, adding that the channel only
broadcast 11 hours a day when it was opened in 1999. “It was first
launched as a means to better serve the Tibetan people and preserve the
Tibetan language,” he said.
The channel mainly targets local peasants and herdsmen, accounting for
about 80 percent of the 2.8 million Tibetan population in southwest
China’s Tibet Autonomous Region, as well as overseas Tibetans in India
and Nepal, according to Gongbu.
Programs on the channel cover local news reporting, shows of traditional
Tibetan dancing and singing, and TV series translated into the Tibetan
language. “The reason why we decided to lengthen the broadcasting time
is that we want to offer better service to the viewers, especially for
those living in Nepal and India. You know, there is a time difference,”
Gongbu said. “The Tibetan-language TV channel is the only one I watch
everyday,” said Nima Cangjue, a 68-year-old Tibetan from Xigaze
Prefecture in southern Tibet. Like the majority of Tibetans, Nima does
not speak or understand mandarin Chinese which is used in most other TV
channels.—Xinhua |