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In
the 1980s, considerable effort was made to
upgrade the telecommunications system. The Sixth
Five-Year Plan, for instance, called for a
public-sector investment of Rs10.1 billion to
improve and expand the telephone and telex
systems. In the mid-1990s, all overseas
telecommunications used the Intelsat-VI
satellite of the International
Telecommunications Satellite Organization. There
were also plans to launch a Pakistani satellite
based on very small aperture earth stations,
which would provide nationwide coverage for
domestic telecommunications. The number of
telephone connections increased from 461,000 in
June 1984 to 1.6 million in March 1993, when the
government announced that the Pakistan
Telecommunications Corporation would be
privatized. A new entity, the National
Telecommunications Network, was planned to
assume responsibility for the government's own
network.
Radio
and television are dominated by government
corporations. The Pakistan Broadcasting
Corporation (PBC) has a monopoly on radio
broadcasting. In March 1992, there were 705,000
licensed radios, but the actual number of radios
in use was estimated at 10 million. The PBC
operates twenty-four medium-wave and three
short-wave transmitters for its domestic
programs and two medium-wave and eight
short-wave transmitters for its external
service. There are six networks for domestic
service--one national network and the five
regional networks for Balochistan, the Islamabad
Capital Territory, the North-West Frontier
Province, the Northern Areas, Punjab, and Sindh.
The external service broadcasts in fifteen
languages--Arabic, Burmese, Bengali, Dari,
English, Farsi, French, Gujarati, Hindi,
Indonesian, Swahili, Tamil, Turkmen, Turkish,
and Urdu. An important target audience is
Pakistanis working in the Middle East. Azad
Kashmir Radio, a separate government-run
organization, broadcasts in Azad Kashmir.
In
early 1994, the government-controlled Pakistan
Television Corporation (PTV) carried programs
produced in five centers-- Islamabad, Karachi,
Lahore, Peshawar, and Quetta. Programming comes
under the purview of the Ministry of Information
and Broadcasting, and goals include providing
wholesome entertainment, promoting national
solidarity, and projecting an Islamic way of
life. In November 1992, PTV began broadcasting
on a second channel made possible by Japanese
financing and technology. This channel is
intended mainly for educational purposes. A
commercial station was also established in the
early 1990s and provides competition for PTV. In
1993 it was estimated that there were over 2
million television sets, and the number is
expected to climb steeply in the 1990s. The main
PTV channel is capable of reaching 87 percent of
the population, while the second channel is
accessible to 56 percent of the population.
Telegraph
and telephone systems government owned; more
than 1.6 million telephone connections in March
1993. Radio and telephone dominated by
government corporations; Pakistan Broadcasting
Corporation had monopoly on radio broadcasting
with home service of 270 hours daily in twenty
languages and world service of ten hours daily
in two languages in 1995; nineteen AM, eight FM
broadcasting stations. Government controlled
Pakistan Television Corporation (PTV) transmits
daily; privately owned People's Television
Network transmits on eight channels; twenty-nine
TV broadcast stations; more than 2 million TV
sets in use in 1995.
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