- Employees went on open-ended strike this month over unpaid salaries
- Information Minister Ziad Makary shuttered the outlet on Friday
LONDON: Lebanon’s first public television network, Tele Liban, was shut down on Friday by Information Minister Ziad Makary, amid concerns over funding and labor issues.
The decision comes in the wake of the broadcaster grappling for months with several challenges including the non-payment of salaries, according to Lebanon’s National News Agency.
The media outlet’s employees went on an open-ended strike earlier this month over unpaid salaries and the withholding of other benefits.
In a recent interview with Arab News, Mirna Chidiac, head of Tele Liban’s Employees Syndicate, said that the strike was the result of a “long series of unsuccessful attempts to receive their dues,” adding that the salaries being paid in the country’s devalued currency was “unsustainable.”
Makary announced that the government had released the funds to pay employees, but due to staff reductions at public institutions “transactions are slow.”
However, many expressed concerns on social media that the government was planning to close the network permanently.
Playwright and actor Ziad Itani saw the move as “a crime against Lebanese memory and national institutions,” adding that the closure was “implemented by a gang of recently empowered militias that fail to comprehend the cultural and artistic significance of the nation’s heritage.”
هذا ليس اجراءا حكوميا، ولا حتى مجرد إغلاق محطة تلفزيونية، هي جريمة بحق ذاكرة اللبنانيين، وبحق مؤسسات وطنية، تكافل بتنفيذها عصبة من أزلام مليشيات حديثة السلطة، فاقدة لأدنى معاني البعد الثقافي والفني لإرث هذه البلاد..
إقفال #تلفزيون_لبنان سيسجل بأحرف عريضة على جبين الرعاع الذين…— ziad itani (@ZiadItanioff) August 11, 2023
Actress Carmen Lebbos shared a video in which she criticized the government for its decision, saying: “Is there a country in the world that lacks a state-owned television channel? Indeed, there is us — the nation without a (functioning) government.”
Lebbos said the closure “erases the memory of the homeland and the nation.” She accused the authorities of nepotism and corruption, which has seen people employed who are idle.
ما بتقدرو غير عالوطن… تصبحون على وطن 💔#تلفزيون_لبنان #لا_دولة #كارمن_لبس pic.twitter.com/z9JzYLG9Bd
— Carmen Lebbos – كارمن لبس 🎭😌 (@C_lebbos) August 11, 2023
Hasan Dorr, a columnist for Aliwaa news website, wrote: “The name Tele Liban will forever remind us of the good old days! Closing this channel is a victory for the era of bad media.”
لطالما ارتبط اسم #تلفزيون_لبنان بالزّمن الجميل!
إقفال هذه الشّاشة انتصار لزمن الإعلام الرّديء.. pic.twitter.com/dazjNRJwEq— حسن الدّر (@HasanDorr) August 11, 2023
Founded in 1959 as Compagnie Libanaise de Television, Tele Liban was the first television station in the Middle East and the Arab world.
Tele Liban’s current structure is the result of a merger between the country’s two leading privately-run networks, CLT and Tele-Orient. It was Lebanon’s sole network until the end of the civil war.
Tele Liban has faced several challenges over the years, including during the Lebanese Civil War from 1975 to 1990 when it was taken over by militias and used as a platform to air their agendas.
In recent years, Tele Liban has been accused of not being objective and having too close ties with the Lebanese government.
However, the network has remained an important part of Lebanese culture, providing a variety of programming, including news and current affairs.