National Television and Radio Company of Uzbekistan
The National Television and Radio Company of Uzbekistan (Uzbek: Oʻzbekiston Milliy teleradiokompaniyasi, MTRK) is the national broadcaster of Uzbekistan, operating four television networks.[1]
Type | Broadcast radio and television |
---|---|
Availability | National International |
Founded | 5 November 1956 (Television) |
Headquarters | Tashkent, Uzbekistan |
Owner | President of Uzbekistan |
Key people | Alisher Khojayev - General Director |
Official website | http://www.mtrk.uz |
Language | Uzbek, Russian |
Two new channels were launched by the company in early 2013: 'Madaniyat va Maʼrifat' ('Culture and Enlightenment') and 'Dunyo boʻylab' ('Around the World').[2] By the end of the year, four new channels were launched using the frequencies of private television channels which were prohibited by the Uzbek authorities.
In January 2013, the organisation's website was hacked by someone who was going with the handle @CloneSecurity.[3] The attack was said to have been launched for political reasons.[4]
TV channels
Nationwide
- Oʻzbekiston (flagship national channel)
- Uzbekistan (satellite version of Oʻzbekiston)
- Yoshlar (youth channel)
- Sport
- UzHD (High Definition channel)
- Madaniyat va Maʼrifat (Culture and Enlightenment)
- Dunyo Boʻylab (Around the World)
- Bolajon (children's channel, offspring of Yoshlar)
- Navo (music channel, offspring of Yoshlar)
- Oilaviy (family channel, offspring of Oʻzbekiston)
- Diyor (country)
- Kinoteatr (movie channel, offspring of Dunyo Bo'ylab)
- Mahalla (society)
- Oʻzbekiston 24 (news channel)
- Oʻzbekiston tarixi (historical channel, formerly UZHD)
- Foreign Languages
Radio channels
- Oʻzbekiston
- Yoshlar
- Toshkent
- Mahalla
- O‘zbekiston24
References
- "Uzbekistan profile". BBC News. Retrieved 5 April 2014.
- "Two new TV channels launched on Uzbek television". Trend.Az. Retrieved 5 April 2014.
- "Uzbekistan National Television and Radio Company hacked by CloneSecurity". The Hackers Post. Retrieved 5 April 2014.
- "Uzbekistan". Freedom House. Retrieved 5 April 2014.
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.