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SES reaches 291 million TV homes worldwide, 151 million in Europe

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MUMBAI: SES has increased its reach in 2013 worldwide to 291 million and in Europe to 151 million TV homes. This represents an increase of 5 per cent both worldwide and in Europe, compared to the previous year, strongly driven by the development in Africa, Middle East and, especially, India (+ 18 percent) and in Asia-Pacific (+ 7 percent). The household reach in Latin America grew by 5 percent, in North America by 3 percent. These are the results of SES’ annual market research, including the detailed Satellite Monitor studies in Europe.

The direct reach from the SES fleet to satellite homes grew from 99 million in 2012 to 106 million satellite TV homes in 2013. The indirect reach through the feed of cable networks from SES satellites grew slightly, from 152 to 153 million homes; the number of IPTV homes fed from SES satellites increased by 27 percent to 31 million. The strongest relative growth of the direct reach came from the Asia-Pacific region (+ 21 percent) and Africa, Middle East and India (+ 18 percent). These figures confirm satellite’s continuous increase in reach and its leading role as a broadcasting infrastructure in general and as digital and High Definition (HD) broadcasting infrastructure in particular.

The SES Satellite Monitor results also emphasize again the important role of SES in Europe.  SES satellites service almost all cable and IPTV homes in Europe (95 percent) and a large majority of the European satellite HD homes (81 percent). The largest single DTH market for SES in Europe remains Germany, with 18 million ASTRA homes receiving their TV signal directly from the SES fleet.  SES transmits more than 6,200 TV channels, 1,800 of them in HD.

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“The results of this year’s SES Satellite Monitor and market research confirm again the strong role that SES is playing as a high performing video and TV broadcasting infrastructure”, said Ferdinand Kayser, Chief Commercial Officer (CCO) of SES. “Our strong growth is a direct result of our significant investments in new satellites especially in the highly important and dynamic emerging markets. We could also further take advantage of our strong infrastructure and service offerings in mature markets and realise further gains, on a high level, in Europe and North America.  As a leader in video broadcasting, DTH, digital transmission and HD, SES plays a critical role in the provision of communications infrastructure globally and is well positioned to further drive digitalisation and the deployment of high performing video neighbourhoods in mature as well as demanding emerging markets.”

 

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MAM

Bali Travel Insurance for Animal Bite Incidents: Is There Really Coverage?

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Bali is full of memorable moments, and some of them involve animals. Temple monkeys tug at bags, beach dogs nap near sunbeds, and cats wander into cafés like they own the place. Most interactions are harmless, but a bite or scratch can change the day quickly, because you may need immediate medical care and follow-up treatment. This is where Bali travel insurance becomes more than a box to tick.

In this article, you will explore whether animal bite treatment is insured, the exclusions, and the steps to claim easily in Bali.

Why Animal Bites in Bali Need Special Attention

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Bites are not only about the visible wound. Insurers and doctors both treat them as medical events that can pose an infection risk, especially when the bite breaks the skin.

A scratch that looks small in the moment can still lead to:

●    A doctor’s examination and wound cleaning  
●    Medicines and dressings  
●    Follow-up consultations if the doctor advises observation or further care

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From an insurance perspective, this matters because claims are usually assessed on medical necessity and documentation, not on how dramatic the injury appears in a photo.

How International Travel Insurance Looks at an Animal Bite

Most travel policies are built around emergency medical expenses for unexpected illness or accidental injury abroad. A bite or scratch usually fits the accidental injury bucket, but coverage is rarely blanket.

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In many plans, the following may be considered if a doctor prescribes them and bills and medical notes support them:

●    Consultation and outpatient treatment  
●    Emergency care and procedures, such as wound dressing or stitches, if clinically required  
●    Prescribed medicines and investigations  
●    Hospitalisation if the treating doctor confirms it is needed

Common Reasons Claims Get Reduced or Rejected

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This is the part travellers often miss. Insurers usually do not deny claims because an animal was involved. Claims become difficult when the event looks avoidable, the reporting is delayed, or the paperwork is weak.

Avoidable-Risk Situations Insurers Scrutinise

Policies commonly exclude or limit claims linked to unsafe conduct or preventable exposure. For animal bites, scrutiny may increase if the incident appears connected to:

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●    Provoking, feeding, or trying to handle wild animals  
●    Ignoring warning signs at tourist spots  
●    Being intoxicated at the time of the incident  
●    Activities that a policy lists as excluded or restricted

The takeaway is simple: if your own description sounds like a risky choice rather than a sudden accident, the insurer may challenge it.

Delays, Missing Papers, and Policy Conditions

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Even when your incident is genuinely accidental, claims can still stall due to basics such as:

●    Not informing the insurer or assistance partner within the required time  
●    Missing itemised bills, prescriptions, or clinical notes  
●    No proof of travel dates or passport entry details when requested  
●    Submitting only pharmacy slips without a doctor’s consultation record

International travel insurance is paperwork-driven. If you document it well, you reduce the chance of avoidable back-and-forth.

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What to Do If You Are Bitten or Scratched in Bali

Your health comes first, always. But a few sensible steps can protect your recovery and keep your insurance file clean.

Medical Steps That Help You and Your Claim

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Act fast, stay calm, and get proper care before worrying about bills.

●    Clean the wound promptly and seek medical care, even if it seems minor  
●    Follow the doctor’s advice, including follow-ups if recommended  
●    Avoid self-medicating in place of a clinical assessment, because insurers often ask for a doctor’s report

Claim Notes and Documents to Collect

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Keep these handy; they’ll save time and avoid follow-up questions later.

●    Doctor’s notes that mention the nature of injury, treatment given, and advised next steps  
●    Prescriptions and pharmacy invoices  
●    Itemised hospital or clinic bills  
●    A brief written note of where and when it happened, while it is still fresh in your mind

Final Word

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Animal bites in Bali are not rare, and they are not always dramatic, which is exactly why travellers underestimate them. Many travel policies can cover bite-related medical treatment when it is accidental and medically necessary, but the outcome depends on your policy terms and the quality of your documentation. If you buy cover thoughtfully, keep the assistance number handy, and respond sensibly if an incident happens, you give yourself the best chance of both good medical care and a smoother claim experience.  
 

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