Subscribe to Print Edition | Thu., November 15, 2007 Kislev 5, 5768 | | Israel Time: 09:13 (EST+7)
Haaretz israel news English
web haaretz.com
  Back to Homepage
Print Edition
Diplomacy
Defense Arts & Leisure Real Estate Jewish World National Advertising
Easy Start Magazine Business Opinion Rosner's Domain Anglo File Week's End Books
del.icio.us
Digg It!  new
Last update - 09:09 15/11/2007
Sports channel could face NIS 430 million lawsuit over Italian soccer deal
By Yael Walzer, Haaretz Correspondent
tags: cable T.V., sports, lawsuit

A broadcast agreement dating from 2002 about Italian soccer matches could land the cable TV company in court facing a major class-action lawsuit.

The Sports Channel (Channel 5) has received warning that a NIS 430 million class-action suit against it and the cable television company, filed in 2002, will be revived unless five main Italian soccer league games featuring Inter Milan and Juventus are broadcast live, as agreed in an August 2006 compromise deal.

Attorney Reut Ben Zeev says on behalf of the claimants that the court-sanctioned agreement has been violated. Six of the nine rounds of the Italian League matches already held have not been broadcast as they should have been, she says.
Advertisement
In addition, none of the Inter Milan or Juventus games have been broadcast, in direct violation of the agreement, Ben Zeev says, calling this development "contempt of court". A spokesman for the Sports Channel, however, said the attorney was "rushing to smear the cable and satellite companies" and that "only quantitative pledges" were made.

Broadcast rights to the Italian League were jointly acquired by the Sports Channel and broadcasting company Charlton this year. But most of the games over recent weeks have not been broadcast because of disagreements between the two companies. A particular sore point has been Charlton's assertion that the Sports Channel refused to pay it for key games.

The original class action was filed to the Tel Aviv District Court in 2002 against Metav Cable Communications and Golden Channels - now known as HOT - the Cable and Satellite Council and the Communications Ministry. Claimants representing the public contended that the companies had grossly misled the public and violated consumer contracts, including transfer of content from one channel to another. They accused the Cable Council of neglecting its duties.

The parties reached a compromise in August 2006, which was granted the validity of a verdict. The plaintiffs are said to have agreed to broadcast live all six Inter Milan and Juventus games in the 2007-2008 season, with the deal rendered void and the suit renewed if the channel failed to meet any of the terms. But the Sports Channel dismissed the threat of legal proceedings.

"Attorney Ben Zeev has not bothered to check the facts, and has based the claim on an outdated, irrelevant compromise agreement, and is rushing to smear the cable and satellite companies and the Sports Channel in newspaper headlines," the spokesman says.

"If she had waited to receive our response to her letter she would have learned that the compromise agreement does not include an undertaking to broadcast the Inter Milan and Juventus games, nor does it promise to broadcast the main game. Only quantitative pledges were made with regard to the Italian league, and we intend to meet these and more. We intend to review the legal repercussions of attorney Ben Zeev's unfounded remarks."

Related articles:
  • Trustbuster supports class action against sports channels
  • Where have all the channels gone?
  • Knesset to discuss ways to cut World Cup viewing costs
  • Bookmark to del.icio.us
    New Kids in the Strip
    Hamas' new police band lifts spirits by crooning about Islamic holy war.
    Less than equal
    A poll shows 70% of youth don't think Bedouin deserve the same rights as Jews
     Today Online
    Israel to declare freeze on W. Bank settlement construction
    Responses: 391
    Seth Anziska: Is the two-state solution still a viable option?
    Responses: 121
    Amira Hass: For some Gazans, Hamas is now object of hatred
    Responses: 69
    Editorial: For equality's sake, Arabs should be 'Israelized'
    Responses: 87
    Iran charges five Argentines over 1994 Jewish center attack
    Responses: 73
    Rosner's Domain
    Rosner's Guest: Vanessa Ochs on keeping Judaism real and relevant
    GA 2007: Oy vey, no catastrophe to talk about
    Reasons to like John McCain (WTR)
    Ahead of summit, N.Y. Congressman fears for Mideast stability


    More Headlines
    07:15 Avigdor Lieberman: PA must recognize Israel as a Jewish state
    08:32 Watchdog group: Only two W. Bank roadblocks removed recently
    07:19 French court examines footage of Muhammad al-Dura's death
    08:24 Germany says willing to discuss Holocaust survivors' pensions
    07:40 Rightists buying housing in Druze town to boost Jewish population
    05:05 Promised settlement freeze raises more questions than answers
    07:58 Amendment to Basic Law on Jerusalem shakes up coalition
    05:37 Teachers union: Talks to end strike 'progress on several fronts'
    05:25 Palestinian police sweep West Bank refugee camp
    09:09 Sports channel could face NIS 430 million lawsuit over Italian soccer deal
    Previous Editions
    Special Offers
    Advertisement
    Invest in Macedonia
    New Business Heaven in Europe
    Long-term Israel programs
    MASA is your gateway. More programs. More grants.
    Eldan Rent a Car
    Israel's leading car rental company offers you a 20% discount on all online reservations
    JOIN FREE AT JDATE.COM
    The most popular online Jewish dating community in the world! Explore the possibilities! Click Here!
    Dead Sea Salt
    Beauty and skin care from the Dead Sea. Coupon code HAARETZ for 10% off!
    Junkyard
    Junk a car - get free towing nationwide and a tax-deductible receipt.
    Holiday Inn and Crown Plaza Israel
    Lowest internet rate Guaranteed at ichotelsgroup.com !
    Home| TV| Print Edition| Diplomacy| Opinion| Arts & Leisure| Sports| Jewish World| Underground| Site rules|
    © Copyright  Haaretz. All rights reserved