43-652: Amanah or Al-Amanah may refer to: Organizations [ edit ] Al Amanah College , an Islamic private school in New South Wales, Australia Al-Amanah Islamic Bank , a bank in the Philippines Amanah Raya Berhad , a Malaysian trustee company wholly owned by the Government of Malaysia Amanah Ikhtiar Malaysia , a Malaysian microcredit organisation Amanah Saham Bumiputera ,
86-494: A Malaysia unit trust management company Angkatan Amanah Merdeka (Amanah), a Malaysian Non-Government Organisation National Trust Party (Malaysia) or AMANAH, a political party in Malaysia Other uses [ edit ] Amanah (administrative division) , an Arabic term for mayoralty or municipality Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with
129-713: A corporation in 1991. Throughout the early 1990s, SBS TV coverage was expanded further to include new regional areas such as the Latrobe Valley , Spencer Gulf , Darwin , northeast Tasmania , Cairns and Townsville . In 1992, SBS's radio and television facilities were gradually relocated to new premises in Artarmon , New South Wales . Radio services were initially located in Bondi Junction and television services in Milsons Point . The new building
172-493: A primary school, playground and mosque . The Liverpool campus features a primary school, secondary school, and playgrounds. The Liverpool campus has over 200 students in both primary and secondary. The school employs more than 100 staff members. The Head Principal of both campuses is Mohamad El Dana and the Principals are B. Adra (Bankstown Campus) and A. Alwan (Liverpool Campus). The Al Amanah College has been affiliated to
215-533: A video on demand application called "SBS On Demand VR", later renamed "SBS VR". SBS has been providing multilingual services since 1975. Alongside news and radio, the SBS in-language units in both Sydney and Melbourne, provide a range of language services for medium to large organisations, private and government businesses. These include accredited translations, typesetting, voiceovers/re-narration, subtitling and video services in over 68 languages. SBS independent (SBSi)
258-592: A year at this stage and not all antennas had worked well with the low-frequency Channel 0. In August 1986, the government proposed legislation that would amalgamate SBS into the ABC . This was highly unpopular with ethnic-minority communities, and after protests from both SBS staff and communities, resulted in the Prime Minister of Australia , Bob Hawke announcing in 1987 that the proposed amalgamation would not proceed. The SBS Radio and Television Youth Orchestra
301-473: Is South Park . As a result of extensive post-World War II immigration to Australia and the end of the controversial and racist White Australia Policy , the federal government began to consider the need for "ethnic broadcasting" – programming targeted at ethnic minorities and mostly delivered in languages other than English. Until 1970, radio stations were prevented by law from broadcasting in foreign languages for more than 2.5 hours per week. In June 1975 at
344-576: Is "to provide multilingual and multicultural radio and television services that inform, educate and entertain all Australians and, in doing so, reflect Australia's multicultural society". SBS is one of five main free-to-air networks in Australia. SBS formally came into existence in 1978 as a radio network. Full-time transmission began on a new television channel in 1980. In-show advertising commenced in 2006. Commercial breaks are set at five minutes per hour. SBS's most successful imported television series
387-428: Is 30 percent more than other broadcasters", claimed Brown upon announcing the new move. SBS's commercial breaks remained at their existing statutory limit of five minutes per hour, as opposed to the fifteen minutes per hour permitted on Australia's fully commercial stations. An individual break lasted between one and two minutes. A related change was the launch of a one-hour 6:30 pm edition of World News , replacing
430-652: Is a dual campus independent Islamic co-educational primary and secondary day school , located in Bankstown and Liverpool , suburbs in south-western Sydney , New South Wales , Australia . Al Amanah College is a project developed by the Islamic Charity Projects Association . The school motto, translated from Arabic into English is "Success Through Knowledge". Al Amanah College commenced its first year of its primary school on 2 February 1998. The Bankstown campus features
473-475: Is a lot of violence, that's going on, that we see in the media, and in the news," said 2014 school captain Mohamad Zahab. "People have not portrayed the proper message, the proper beliefs about our religion, Islam. They've tarnished the name of Islam." Also, a Principal voiced his concerns regarding the students of Al Amanah College, "We are putting a lot of effort and stress on building the identity of
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#1732787498427516-519: Is an Australian hybrid-funded public service broadcaster . About 80 percent of funding for the company is derived from the Australian taxpayer. SBS operates six TV channels ( SBS , SBS Viceland , SBS World Movies , SBS Food , NITV and SBS WorldWatch ) and seven radio networks (SBS Radios 1, 2 and 3, Arabic24, SBS Chill, SBS South Asian and SBS PopAsia ). SBS Online is home to SBS On Demand video streaming service. The stated purpose of SBS
559-695: The UEFA Euro 2008 in Austria and Switzerland. Following "extensive community consultation" in 2003, SBS introduced a range of new programs, including services in Malay , Somali and Amharic – in addition to the expansion of many existing programs. In April 2013, SBS rolled out a major overhaul of its radio schedule . The last major review of the SBS Radio schedule had taken place in 1994, and since then Australia's demographics had changed significantly. With
602-501: The "SBSRadio" identifier and, if their radio permits, by RDS scrolling text on their FM-capable RDS radio. NOW and NEXT data was progressively added to all radio services in 2012 and 2013. This now/next data is displayed on FM RDS Radio (Melbourne/Sydney) and DAB+ receptions areas for radios that can display metadata. NOW and NEXT Radio schedule is also displayed on free-to-air Terrestrial Digital Television (DTV) program guides and on TiVo and TBox where applicable. SBS rolled out
645-606: The 14-day rolling radio schedule over DTV television in November 2012. A radio event (or program) can be viewed and booked/recorded to PVR or the listener reminded. The schedule adapts to daylight saving changes as required. Following the Language Services Review in 2021, SBS re-introduced a range of new and existing programs in revised languages in November 2022. SBS on Demand is a video on demand and catch-up TV service run by SBS. In April 2016, SBS launched
688-541: The College grew further through the opening of the Liverpool Campus with 168 students, where secondary classes commenced with Year 7 then expanded to year 12 in 2007. The Liverpool Campus is located in the heart of Liverpool City catering for K–12 with 600 primary and secondary students. On 4 December 2014, SBS hosted a special report on Al Amanah College regarding a program to prevent radicalisation. "There
731-654: The Islamic Charity Projects Association, the founder of Al Amanah and Salamah College . ICPA also founded Al Amanah's sister school, Salamah College, in Chester Hill and Glenroy Private School in Victoria . The college was first established at Bankstown, where classes commenced with 88 students K–3 in 1998 and from there the school grew rapidly. The Bankstown campus has now reached its maximum capacity with 288 (K–6) in 2011. In 2002
774-417: The SBS managing director, Shaun Brown , announced the corporation's desire to initiate in-show commercial breaks, in the same manner as the commercial television networks. He said that the move would raise $ 10 million in the first year, as he believes that SBS's current strategy of showing ads between programs "is unpopular with viewers". "On average we lose more than half our audience during these breaks – this
817-725: The Transmission Services division (intended to manage transmission and self-help services). A New Media division, responsible for the SBS website, was established at the start of 2000 in time for the first webcast of the Australian Film Institute Awards . Ratings continued to increase through 2000 to 2001 – increasing to an overall 5.2% average weekly audience share. In April 2003, SBS Radio dropped four languages from its schedule, Irish, Scots Gaelic, Welsh, and Belarusian, and added four others, Amharic, Nepalese, Malay, and Somali, while increasing
860-719: The World Back Home". The network changed its name to simply SBS in February 1985 and soon began daytime transmissions. SBS also expanded to the cities of Brisbane , Adelaide , Newcastle , Wollongong and the Gold Coast in June of that year. On 5 January 1986, SBS ceased broadcasting on the VHF channel 0 frequency. Although many Australians at the time did not have UHF antennas, SBS's VHF licence had already been extended by
903-916: The behest of Minister for Immigration Al Grassby , two "experimental" radio stations began broadcasting: 2EA in Sydney and 3EA in Melbourne (EA stood for "Ethnic Australia"), partly to publicise the Whitlam government's social policy changes to ethnic communities. In March 1976, the Fraser government established the Consultative Committee on Ethnic Broadcasting, followed by the National Ethnic Broadcasting Advisory Council in January 1977. Initially, it
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#1732787498427946-609: The broadcast hours for Cantonese , Mandarin , and Arabic . SBS broadcast the 2004 Athens Olympics in partnership with the Seven Network . and also broadcast Euro 2008 in Austria and Switzerland. Tagalog , Vietnamese and Arabic language broadcasts were added to SBS's WorldWatch television schedule in 2003. However, the Vietnamese community protested the Vietnamese-language service, whose content
989-405: The channel became SBS Food. In June 2016, SBS announced that SBS 2 was set to be rebranded as SBS Viceland with content from US-Canadian youth Vice Media from November 2016. On 1 July 2019, SBS relaunched their former pay-TV movie channel, World Movies as SBS World Movies and it became a free-to-air channel. On 12 January 2022, SBS announced that a sixth free-to-air television channel, with
1032-514: The content. In May 2008, SBS unveiled a new-look logo as well as a new backronymic slogan: "Six Billion Stories and counting". On 8 May 2012, SBS received $ 158 million in government funding, of which $ 15 million would be used yearly, to fund the formation of a new free-to-air channel devoted to the indigenous peoples of Australia . which would replace the existing National Indigenous Television on 12 December 2012, with 90% of its staff transferring to this new channel. On 12 December 2012, NITV
1075-483: The first subscription channel to launch was World Movies ; the channel focuses on independent international films. It was closed on 31 January 2018 but relaunched on free-to-air television on 1 July 2019. In April 2010, SBS launched Studio (previously marketed at as STVDIO); that channel focused on arts programming such as classical and popular music, literature, film, visual arts and dance with documentaries and performances. However, Studio closed down on 27 March 2015 and
1118-571: The government set up the Ethnic Television Review Panel, which recommended that SBS should expand multilingual services into television. SBS TV began test transmissions in April 1979 when it showed various foreign language programs on ABV-2 Melbourne and ABN-2 Sydney on Sunday mornings. Full-time transmission began on a new television channel at 6:30 pm on 24 October 1980 ( United Nations Day ). The first program shown
1161-436: The half-hour World News Australia and World Sport programs. In-show advertising commenced on 9 October 2006 during the 7.30 pm broadcast of MythBusters . Former SBS television services are SBS Essential (LCN 31, sporting events, and other digital-only projects, when available) and SBS World News Channel (LCN 32, foreign news service). In 1995, SBS launched a new division called SBS Subscription TV. In October 1995,
1204-475: The new schedule SBS intends to better reflect Australia's ethnic composition. With the addition of six new languages: Malayalam , Dinka , Hmong , Pashto , Swahili and Tigrinya , SBS has brought the total number of languages from 68 to 74. SBS rolled out a trial of RDS (Radio Data System) in the Melbourne and Sydney broadcast areas in November 2012. Radio listeners can identify the SBS Radio service by
1247-403: The new station. SBS programming content was initially imported from the suppliers in the countries-of-origin of Australia's major migrant communities and then subtitled into English. In October–November 1983, the service expanded to service the centres of Canberra , Cooma and Goulburn , subsequently changing its name to Network 0–28. Its new slogan was the eventual long-running "Bringing
1290-530: The radio services were expanded to cover Hobart and Canberra , while SBS TV 's coverage was further expanded to include the New South Wales North Coast and the town of Albury . Comedy Central 's South Park , SBS's most successful imported television series, was first aired in 1997. A time-delay system was installed for South Australia in May 1999, shortly before the establishment of
1333-467: The title Amanah . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Amanah&oldid=1073446225 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Al Amanah College Al Amanah College
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1376-596: The working title SBS WorldWatch , would be launched in 2022. The channel would be free to air and would broadcast all foreign-language bulletins currently broadcast on SBS and SBS Viceland, and new locally-produced news bulletins in Arabic and Mandarin Chinese in prime time. The Arabic and Mandarin bulletins launched on 15 February 2022 through SBS On Demand , while the official trailer for the SBS WorldWatch channel
1419-521: The young Muslims, that they belong to Australia, their nationality, they are Australian, and at the same time, their religion is Islam" . In 2023, Al Amanah College was ordered to repay $ 19.4 million in government funding after they were found to be operating for profit. An investigation found it had used its assets and income for purposes not needed to run the school, including purchasing a hotel which it operated until 2019. Special Broadcasting Service The Special Broadcasting Service ( SBS )
1462-520: Was Grisha Sklovsky, and the inaugural executive director was Ronald Fowell. The service was initially a radio network, and had oversight only of the two existing stations 2EA and 3EA. It was always intended that it would be enlarged, but this process was controversial – the Federation of Australian Commercial Television Stations wanted the television functions to be controlled by the ABC. In March 1979,
1505-412: Was a documentary entitled Who Are We? , which was hosted by veteran news presenter Peter Luck. At the time, SBS was broadcasting on UHF Channel 28 and VHF Channel 0 (pronounced as "oh" and not "zero"), with a planned discontinuation of the latter at some time in the future. Bruce Gyngell , who introduced television to Australia in 1956 , was given the task of introducing the first batch of programs on
1548-610: Was considered feasible for ethnic broadcasting to be delivered by the Australian Broadcasting Commission (ABC); however, this plan was abandoned in mid-1977. In October 1977, the government announced the creation of SBS as a new independent statutory authority for ethnic broadcasting. This was achieved as a result of an amendment to the Broadcasting Act 1942 . SBS formally came into existence on 1 January 1978. The inaugural Chair of SBS
1591-550: Was officially opened on 10 November 1993 by the prime minister, Paul Keating , and a national radio network was launched in January 1994. The new service initially covered Brisbane, Adelaide , Perth , and Darwin, while original stations 2EA and 3EA were renamed Radio Sydney and Radio Melbourne respectively. However, the new national service was launched on a separate frequency in Sydney and Melbourne in July of that year. Throughout 1996,
1634-475: Was re-launched as an SBS-operated free-to-air channel, replacing SBS4. SBS is a supporter of same-sex marriage and pulled an anti-same-sex marriage advertisement ahead of its telecast of the Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras . Then managing director, Michael Ebeid , defended SBS's position on the issue. On 17 November 2015, the new food channel, SBS Food Network , was launched. On 17 November 2018,
1677-483: Was released six days later, which announced the launch date of 23 May. Regardless of state or territory, SBS television services always use the callsign "SBS". On 14 December 2006, SBS announced its intention to change to 720p as its high-definition transmission standard for SBS HD . SBS had previously down converted its scheduled SBS high-definition content to the 576p standard. On 5 June 2012, SBS upgraded its HD format from 720p to 1080i . On 1 June 2006,
1720-417: Was replaced by Foxtel Arts . SBS Radio broadcasts in 74 languages in all Australian states, producing an estimated 13,500 hours of Australian programming for its two frequencies in Sydney and Melbourne as well as for its national network. Much like SBS TV , SBS radio receives funding from a mix of government grants, paid-for government information campaigns and commercial advertising. SBS Radio broadcast
1763-523: Was soon launched in 1988 with founding conductor Matthew Krel . Plans to introduce limited commercial-program sponsorship, as well as the establishment of SBS as an independent corporation with its own charter, were put in place in July 1989. A program called Eat Carpet , showcasing local and international short films, was also launched in 1989. The formation of the Special Broadcasting Service Act 1991 officially made SBS
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1806-588: Was taken from VTV4 , Vietnam 's government-controlled national broadcaster. They found the portrayal of the communist Vietnamese flag and Ho Chi Minh offensive and stated that the program's lack of reporting on political arrests and religious oppression was also offensive, especially to those who had fled the country following the Vietnam War . This backlash prompted SBS to remove the bulletin from schedule and from then on to display disclaimers before all externally produced bulletins in order to distance it from
1849-541: Was the primary production unit of SBS programming, which existed from August 1994 to December 2007. At the end of 2007, SBS independent was merged with the SBS Content and Online Division. The SBS Youth Orchestra was an Australian premier youth orchestra, founded in 1988 by the now late Matthew Krel . It was disbanded in 2013. An online platform that celebrates "the diversity of sexuality in Australia and its multicultural communities". SBS used to distribute films in
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