Pies problem: AFL fans abroad will have to look elsewhere for their weekly fix. Credit:Pat Scala No more Tony Jones and Q&A. No more Zoe Daniel and Jim Middleton fronting their program The World, a showcase news program in Asia (Middleton, a fine journalist, has taken a package and left the ABC after 44 years). We won't of course miss some of the programming, like Channel Nine's The Block. But those of us who have been in Asia a while remember the sheepdog trials that were shown in the early days. Actually, I liked watching the sheepdog trials. OK, I acknowledge I am writing this from the perspective of a passionate Collingwood supporter. I can't imagine what it will be like next season. I wake up in the night in a cold sweat thinking about the difficulties of trying to live-stream games on my dodgy internet.

But this is more than an atrocity inflicted on those of us out here deprived of Four'N Twenty meat pies. For my children there will be no more Bananas in Pyjamas or Giggle and Hoot. How do you feel about that, Tony Abbott and Julie Bishop? About 80 jobs have gone as a result of the axing of the network which has operated since 1993, then known as ATVI. Lynley Marshall, the CEO of ABC International, announced the date of the closure in an email to staff and partners. "We will be terminating the Australia Network service at midnight Australian Eastern Standard time on Sunday the 28th of September. We apologise for any inconvenience," she wrote. Oh, by the way, something called Australia Plus Television will provide a six-hour block of television from October 5, but details are vague about what will be shown or how to see it.

There is even a suggestion of pay-for-view content. Pay for our own ABC! What many of us out here do not understand is if there is a crushing need to save $223 million over 10 years by axing the service, why not just give us ABC 24? That would provide a forum for Asian nations to see how our robust democracy works and provide a reliable news service for Australians in the region. As the curtain falls, Ms Marshall left a glimmer of hope that sanity will one day prevail. "Thank you for your support of Australia Network and the ABC over the years and we hope that one day in the future we may be able to partner you again," she wrote. Lindsay Murdoch is Fairfax Media's Bangkok-based South-East Asia correspondent