How Khaleda Zia's 1991 government transformed Bangladesh's broadcasting landscape
Her policies dismantled the state's long-standing media monopoly, enabling satellite reception, foreign content influx, and ultimately laying the foundation for a private media ecosystem that would reshape public discourse, culture, and economics in Bangladesh
In the early 1990s, Bangladesh reached an important turning point. After years of military and authoritarian rule, the country returned to democracy when Khaleda Zia became prime minister in 1991. This change did not only affect politics and governance; it also changed how information was shared and accessed across the country.
Among her government's most consequential yet under-examined reforms was the liberalisation of the broadcasting sector. By opening the skies, her policies dismantled the state's long-standing media monopoly, enabling satellite reception, foreign content influx, and ultimately laying the foundation for a private media ecosystem that would reshape public discourse, culture, and economics in Bangladesh.
For nearly three decades before 1992, electronic media remained firmly under state control. Bangladesh Television (BTV) and Bangladesh Betar operated within a tightly regulated framework that prioritised state authority and limited diversity of viewpoints. These were the sole mass electronic medium, with content shaped by official narratives and constrained entertainment choices. While newspapers were sometimes allowed critical or opposing views, radio and television remained tightly controlled and closed to such voices.
Khaleda Zia's government addressed this legacy by following a more open, market-oriented policy approach, shaped by global media liberalisation and regional changes. One of its early steps was to reform the way BTV operated. Through policies such as the Policy for Supplying Programmes by Government, Private and Individual in BTV and revised facility-leasing rules, private producers were allowed to make programmes for the state broadcaster. This was the first major break in a previously closed system and introduced public-private cooperation in broadcasting.
The decisive turning point came in 1992 with the legalisation of Television Receive Only (TVRO) dishes. For the first time, households and commercial spaces could legally access international satellite channels like CNN and BBC. This ended BTV's entertainment monopoly and exposed Bangladeshi audiences to global news and programming. While critics warned of cultural erosion and media imperialism, the influx of foreign channels stimulated demand, raised audience expectations, and pushed local media towards professionalisation.
This shift must also be understood through a political-economy lens. As analysed in a study called "State, Capital and Media in the Age of Globalization: An Inquiry into the Rapid Growth of Private TV Channels of Bangladesh" published in 2014, the opening of the broadcasting sector coincided with Bangladesh's deeper integration into a neoliberal global economy shaped by World Bank and International Monetary Funds prescriptions. The authors argue that the state did not retreat from media control but reconfigured its role – facilitating private ownership, encouraging advertising-driven models, and enabling the rise of a corporate-political media nexus. Liberalisation thus created space not only for media pluralism, but also for the growing influence of business and political elites over broadcasting.
Economically, the reforms diversified the media and advertising sectors, creating new industries around production, satellite transmission, and marketing. Culturally, access to international programming broadened the imagination of a generation encountering globalisation firsthand. Politically, exposure to external news sources allowed citizens to compare domestic governance with global standards which was an important democratic function in a newly restored electoral system.
These reforms paved the way for Bangladeshi private television channels, most of which emerged after Khaleda Zia's first term. ATN Bangla (1997) and Channel i (1999) were early beneficiaries of this policy environment, followed by Ekushey Television, which challenged BTV's dominance with more dynamic news and entertainment formats.
The liberalisation period, however, was not without problems. Over time, broadcasting became closely linked with political patronage, as licences and ownership were often influenced by party loyalty. Critics argue that instead of fully encouraging independent journalism, early deregulation allowed political and business elites to gain control over media outlets.
Even so, the importance of the early 1990s reforms cannot be denied. By ending the state monopoly, legalising satellite access, and allowing private involvement in broadcasting, Khaleda Zia's government permanently changed Bangladesh's media landscape. These decisions connected the country to global media, widened public access to information, and marked Bangladesh's first clear step into the modern information age.
