Lebanese channels compete in Armenia



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MTV reserved three minutes in the evening bulletin to deliver its corresponding message from Armenia.

Dozens of miles separate Lebanon from Armenia, and it takes five and a half hours for the journey to get from the Armenian capital to the border with Azerbaijan, as battles rage there between the two countries for more than two weeks. Despite the concern of the Lebanese interior about what is happening there, and the matter is limited to the Armenian community in Lebanon, some local channels sent their correspondents there to cover the event in the “Karabakh” or “Karabakh” region. “with the hardships and efforts necessary to endanger their lives. As happened last week, with LBCI correspondent Adamon Sassen, who miraculously survived, along with the rest of the Armenian, French and Russian press teams. The LBCI channel was the first to send Sassen there, accompanied by the photographer Paul Bou Aoun, and while they were with the rest of the tour inside the town of “Martoni” in the disputed region, shells began to fall next to them and they were in a state of panic and fear until they went to a nearby shelter in the town. After LBCI, MTV headed to the border with Armenia, with its correspondent Joel Qizili, and began to specialize in newsletters, a space to transmit the team’s messages from there, about the latest news. Notably, the coverage tends to favor Armenians, with a focus on the displacement movement and praise for the Armenian army’s restoration of a strategic location. Qizili appeared yesterday, in the newsletter, and allocated 3 minutes for him to transmit his message from the border area “Goris” (southeastern Armenia). In the same area, the “new” team arrived the day before yesterday, and its correspondent, Rachel Karam, to begin field coverage of the event there today. Thus, the Lebanese missions continue to arrive in Armenia, and the correspondents travel long distances, to reach the point closest to the event, in a competition of another type, which will be disputed between them, this time, on foreign soil before the stagnation of the local media these days.

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