Radio Okapi

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MONUSCO police officers in Goma participated in a broadcast about sexual and gender-based violence in 2021

Radio Okapi is a

Lingala, Kituba, Swahili and Tshiluba
,

History

Radio Okapi was created by the

United Nations Mission in the Democratic Republic of Congo (MONUC) and the Swiss NGO Fondation Hirondelle. The agreement between MONUC and the Congolese government foresaw the creation of a radio network to inform the Congolese population of the MONUC's efforts. MONUC and the Fondation Hirondelle submitted a plan in 2001 to the United Nations, and the radio network went live on 25 February 2002.[1] The station takes its name from the endangered Okapi
, the elusive mammal native to the rainforest of northern Congo.

In 2011 The Economist said that Radio Okapi was "one of Africa’s most admirably independent radio services".[2]

Mary Myers, in the essay "Well-Informed Journalists Make Well-Informed Citizens: Coverage of Governance Issues in the Democratic Republic of Congo," said that the radio station "raised the bar for other indigenous radio and TV stations in the country."[3] Other area radio stations copied Radio Okapi's news gathering techniques, program concepts, and formats. Myers also said "Although Radio Okapi can be a thorn in the government's side at times, its stance of promoting peace and democracy and the strong role it plays in civic education have led to its recognition, even by the Minister of Information, as a national asset that the Democratic Republic of Congo could ill afford to lose."[3]

Serge Maheshe a journalist for Radio Okapi was shot on 13 June 2007. Maheshe was the editor in chief in Bukavu for the station.[4]

Transmitters

Radio Okapi provides programming in French and in Lingala, Kituba, Swahili and Tshiluba, transmitting all day every day on:[5]

  • Shortwave
    • 9635
      kHz
      (5 AM to 7 AM)
    • 11690 kHz (5 PM to 6 PM)

Sources

  • "Fondation Hirondelle, Media for Peace and Human Dignity". Fondation Hirondelle. Retrieved 24 April 2008.

In film

See also

References

  1. ^ "Radio Okapi - Qui sommes nous?" (in French). Radio Okapi. Retrieved 24 April 2008.
  2. ^ "Congo’s election: That sinking feeling: A general election in the Democratic Republic of Congo may end in tears", The Economist, dated 26 November 2011. Retrieved on 15 February 2012.
  3. ^
    World Bank Publications, 2011. 155. Retrieved from Google Books
    on 15 February 2012. 0821385569, 9780821385562.
  4. ^ "Serge Maheshe - Journalists Killed - Committee to Protect Journalists".
  5. ^ "Radio Okapi: The project". Fondation Hirondelle. Archived from the original on 23 July 2010. Retrieved 25 April 2008.
  6. Rwanda genocide, in the course of which Radio des Mille Collines
    had encouraged the massacres.
  7. ^ Radio Okapi, radio de la vie was selected at:

External links

External links

Media related to Radio Okapi at Wikimedia Commons