http://in.news.yahoo.com/071025/43/6mdly.html

Thu, Oct 25

BBC looking at new media market in South Asia

By IANS
Thursday October 25, 10:18 AM
Hyderabad, Oct 25 (IANS) Going beyond its traditional medium of radio,
BBC is looking at opportunities in the new media market -- Internet,
mobile phones and FM radio -- in South Asia. It is also trying to
produce a majority of its regional language programmes locally.

'The South Asian media market is big and a lot will happen here in the
coming days. We are looking at the future and the future is Internet,
FM radio, mobile phones. We will be looking at every platform to
deliver news,' Nazes Afroz, BBC's executive editor for South Asia,
told IANS in an interview.


It is also thinking of television channels in Hindi and Urdu, although
there are no concrete plans yet.


'Just look at mobile phones. People can download news and listen to it
whenever they want. There are 150 million mobile phones in India. By
2010 the number is expected to reach 300 million. It is a huge
market,' he said.


'This does not mean we will forsake radio. It will remain one of our
focus areas. In fact we are looking at how the audio content can be
provided over new platforms. Our Urdu website, for instance, provides
the content of three programmes daily and this content will be
increased in the coming days,' he said.


News over FM radio is one of the big opportunities BBC is looking at in India.


'FM is the biggest growth area. There are already more than 200 FM
stations in India. The third phase of FM radio and soon to be launched
community radio will open up immense opportunities. We will enter FM
news as and when the government allows it,' Afroz said.


BBC has already got a foothold in FM in India with stakes in Radio One
of Mid Day group. 'We are providing entertainment and sports content
for Radio One in Hindi and Tamil. We will soon do it in Bengali. Our
Hindi content is heard in Haryana, Rajasthan, Orissa and Maharashtra,'
he said.


Except India, all South Asian countries allow news over FM. 'In Nepal,
we have 33 FM stations as our partners. They all pick up our news in
Nepali. We also have 4-5 FM partners in Pakistan, 12 in Sri Lanka and
one in Bangladesh,' Afroz said, hoping that India would also allow
private FM stations to broadcast news.


It is not just the new opportunities in South Asian media that BBC is
looking at. It is also shifting the majority of its production
activities in six regional languages to the countries in the region
where the languages are widely spoken.


'This is part of BBC's vision 2010. The slogan is for the region from
the region. We would like to produce more material for the region from
the region. It is a strategic policy announced two years ago,' he said
while admitting that it also helps in cutting down cost.


BBC has been implementing this policy for the last two years. 'Our
Delhi bureau now has 60 to 70 people and very soon we will be 90 to
100,' Afroz said. It also has bureaus in Mumbai, Islamabad, Karachi,
Colombo and Kathmandu.


'More than 50 percent Hindi content is now produced in Delhi. Urdu
content is largely produced in London,' he said while hinting that BBC
would like to have a presence both in London and South Asia to meet
any exigency.


BBC World has radio services in six languages in South Asia -- Hindi,
Urdu, Bengali, Nepali, Tamil and Sinhala.


Out of 183 million listeners of BBC World radio in 33 languages all
over the world, 55 million are in South Asian languages. Hindi and
Bengali services have 19 million listeners each while Urdu has 13
million listeners. The rest are in Nepali, Tamil and Sinhala services.


Afroz pointed out that BBC would be launching its Arabic television
channel next month. It will be the BBC's first non-English channel. It
also plans to launch a Persian channel next year.


Afroz, who hails from Kolkata, is currently in India on a campaign to
promote the Urdu website of BBC. 'We want to connect with readers and
explain how the website works and how can they navigate. We are
talking directly to users,' he said.

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