§ 65. Sir T. Beamishasked the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs what information he has, from his monitoring, of how
Country Arabic Persian Turkish Yiddish Kurdish U.S.S.R. Moscow … 42.00 21.00 24.30 Nil Nil Radio Peace and Progress … Nil Nil Nil 3.30 Nil Baku … 7.00 12.15 7.00 Nil Nil Dushanbe … Nil 7.00 Nil Nil Nil Erivan … 8.10 Nil Nil Nil 10.30 Tashkent … Nil 7.00 Nil Nil Nil China … 14.00 7.00 7.00 Nil Nil Bulgaria … 17.25 Nil 20.55 Nil Nil Czechoslovakia … 12.50 Nil Nil Nil Nil East Germany … 35.00 Nil Nil Nil Nil Hungary … Nil Nil 9.00 Nil Nil Rumania … 10.30 6.25 6.25 Nil Nil As regards the tenor of these broadcasts I would refer the hon. and gallant Member to Parts I, II and III of the daily Summary of World Broadcasts prepared by the British Broadcasting Corporation monitoring service, copies of which are available in the Library of the House.
§ 66. Sir T. Beamishasked the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs for how many hours per week British programmes, mainly in Arabic, are broadcast to Middle East countries; and what steps he proposes to increase the output and improve their effectiveness.
Mr. MalleyAt present the British Broadcasting Corporation broadcasts to the Middle East for 84 hours a week in Arabic, 7¾ hours in Turkish, 7½ hours in Hebrew and 5¼ hours in Persian, as well as 138¼ hours in the World Service in English.
The main improvement planned is the construction of the new relay station at Masirah Island announced in my hon. Friend's reply to my hon. Friend the Member for Stoke-on-Trent, South (Mr. Ashley) on 2nd February, 1967.—[Vol. 740, c. 169.]