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MUMBAI: The British
Broadcasting Corporation has announced that its Global News division attracts
a record weekly global audience of 238 million people to its international news
services including BBC World Service and the BBC World News television channel.
Last
year BBC's audience totalled 233 million. BBC World Service attracted a record
weekly audience of 188 million. This
figure was boosted by its new BBC Arabic television channel but masked an overall
decline in radio listening which was down five million to 177 million in 2008/9.
However, despite
this loss, BBC World Service remains the world's most popular international radio
broadcaster. The
largest overseas audiences for BBC news across all platforms come from Nigeria
(26 million), the USA (24.1 million) and India (22.2 million). The
biggest increases in the BBC's global audience estimate came from Arab-speaking
countries like Saudi Arabia (+1.9 million), Egypt (+1.3 million), and Syria (+1
million), and newly-surveyed markets like Niger (+2.4 million), Liberia (+1.1
million) and Guinea (+1.4 million). However,
radio audiences in Iran dropped by 1.6 million due to a decline in shortwave listening
there and the cutting of medium wave transmissions. Major
development and enhancement of the BBC's international facing news sites and mobile
phone offer was rewarded with a record 16 million unique online users, a 27 per
cent increase on last year. BBC
Global News director Richard Sambrook said, "In a year when international
radio listening to the BBC actually went down marginally, record overall global
audiences demonstrate the success of our multimedia strategy and investments.
"People
come to the BBC's international news services for journalism and
ask difficult questions, yet they respect different points of
view and actively encourages debate. Increasingly,
audiences want access at a time and place that suits them."
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