Radio France Internationale
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Radio France Internationale (RFI) was created in 1975 as part of Radio France by the Government of France to serve as a broadcast vehicle for French Equatorial Africa. In 1986 a new law passed by the French Parliament allowed RFI to operate independently of Radio France.
RFI operates under the auspices and primary budget of the French Minister of Foreign Affairs. It broadcasts in various languages, including English, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian,Chinese and Spanish.
RFI's English service broadcasts for five and a half hours a day. Its website's music section has a collection of biographies in both the French and English languages.
On September 17, 2002, former president of Togo Gnassingbé Eyadéma tried to stop the broadcasting of an interview of one of his prime opponents, Messan Agbéyomé Kodjo, by phoning directly to the Elysée Palace. The interview was not censored by Jean-Paul Cluzel, RFI's CEO at the time, due to the coordinated intervention of the journalists' trade-unions. However, a reporting lifting questions on the French secret services responsibilities in the 1995 death of judge Bernard Borrel in Djibouti, that had been broadcasted on May 17, 2005, was afterward taken out of RFI's website for unrevealed reasons, maybe due to the intervention of Djibouti's president Ismail Omar Guelleh [1].
On 21 October 2003, Jean Hélène was reporting for RFI during the civil war in Ivory Coast when he was killed in Abidjan by police Sergeant Théodore Séry Dago.
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[edit] Services
Radio France Internationale broadcasts mainly in French, but also offers a number of foreign language services. One of the largest foreign language serivices is the English Service, aimed mainly at Southern Africa and Kenya, but with programmes for the Middle East and South Asia as well. RFI broadcasts morning news, lunchtime, afternoon and early evening programmes:
0400 to 0430 UTC RFI News and Sport
0500 to 0530 UTC RFI News and Sport
0600 to 0630 UTC RFI News and Sport
0700 to 0730 UTC RFI News and Sport
0730 to 0800 UTC English language features programming
1200 to 1210 UTC RFI News
1210 to 1230 UTC English language features programming
1400 to 1430 UTC RFI News and Sport
1430 to 1500 UTC English language features programming
1600 to 1630 UTC RFI News and Sport
1630 to 1700 UTC English language features programming
1700 to 1730 UTC RFI News & African features
All of RFI's English broadcasts are available to listen online and for download on the english service web page at rfi.fr.
[edit] Transmission network
ALLISS is a rotatable antenna system for high power shortwave radio broadcasting.
RFI uses 2 domestic shortwave relay stations in France, and one shortwave relay station in French Guyana. All the stations are owned and operated by the French telecom entitiy TDF.
- All RFI transmitters are fairly universally 500 kw, but some 250 kw are used in French Guyana.
- The technology used by France's domestic SW relay stations is ALLISS.
- The TDF relay station in French Guyana uses standard HRS type antennas.
- ALLISS is a rotatable antenna system for high power shortwave radio broadcasting.
[edit] References
- ^ "Une « CNN à la française » - Parrain privé, chaîne publique", Le Monde Diplomatique, January 2006. (also available in Persian here)
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- RFI website
- (English) English-speaking site
- RFI English language Music section
- RFI [http://www.rfimusique.com/siteEn/biographie/biographie_a.asp Music biographies in
the English language] Radio France