*Broadcast Launch of Community Radio in Lalitpur*
6 Sept 2010, Citizen News Service
http://www.citizen-news.org/2010/09/broadcast-launch-of-community-radio-in.html

Alapur, Birdha Block, Lalitpur: Community Radio (CR) achieved another
milestone on 3rd September 2010. Its first Community Radio (CR) station
'Lalit Lokwani' went on air in Uttar Pradesh (UP) state, India, and
officially began its broadcast to over 80 villages in Lalitpur district of
Budelkhand region. A combined effort of UNICEF, Ideosync Media Combine and
Sai Jyoti, a Laitpur based NGO, the region's first radio station was jointly
put on air by Ranvir Yadav, District Magistrate (DM Lalitpur, Jugal Kishore,
Joint Director Bharatendu Natak Academi UP and well known theatre
personality who also recently made an appearance in Amir Khan's Peepli Live
and Rajeshwari Chandrashekar, Programme Manager, UNICEF Lucknow at a gala
function organized at the Lalit Lokwani station in Alapur. Read more

The best and most popular platform of community representation the service
based on the rural Indian concept of community entertainment, education and
information started its service through narrow casting in October 2007 and
steadily grew in its listenership. Which finally led to its monumental
broadcast launch in Sept 2010 so as to reach more people and give the
community a forum to voice their views through direct dialogue with the govt
and the people.

Aptly admired for its peppy montague which declares the CR broadcast service
as “UP Ki Raani Lalit Lokvani” the service was an eagerly awaited event by
the locals, the district administration and the radio station’s team alike.

Says Mridul Srivastava, Station Manager, Lalit Lokwani, “It has been a
eventful journey for the entire team be it the CR reporters, the editing
staff or the community that have supported us in this venture. Today after
three of narrow casting and Lalit Lokwani has earned the love and trust of
the entire community and locals in and around Lalitpur. The problems faced
by people here be it child marriage, malnutrition, migration, illiteracy,
infant mortality and maternal health issues all found mention through our
radio station. It is a historic moment for us to see it go on air officially
and reach more people in one go.”

Adds Ajay Srivastava, Founder, Sai Jyoti, that manages the CR station, “When
we organized our team the staff we chose came from within the community
itself where narrow casting of the programmes would be done. Most CR
reporters had not seen a mike or a console or even heard what a recording
was. But today by sheer hard work and dedication they have made the radio
programmes so popular that it is the most heard in this region. With the
broadcast launch of Lalit Lokwani it’s utility and popularity will further
enhance in terms of community service in the Bundelkhand Region.”

While initially the service will be broadcast from 7-8 am every morning
there will be two repeat broadcasts at 1-2pm in the afternoon and 6-7 pm in
the evening. Broadcast on a frequency of 90.4 megahertz its reach will be
over 80 villages with over 1.5 lakh listeners in a radius of 15 kms span.

Explains Rachna Sharma, Behaviour Change Communication Specialist, UNICEF
Lucknow, “ Lalitpur was chosen as the UP government felt it had a number of
integrated programmes running here. Thus it was an ideal convergence base
for community development efforts. Thus UNICEF too felt that a Community
Radio Station at such a location was ideal in the true spirit of community
service and upliftment. Though we began with narrow casting of our
programmes in 2007 we received the wireless operating license in August 2010
and so the broadcast launch of Lalit Lokwani was done in September 2010.”

An important means of community outreach programmes the concept of Community
Radio has been very popular in Uttrakhand, Jharkhand, Gujrat and Bihar. Two
new stations are also soon to start in Korapur in Orissa and Dibrugarh in
Assam.

As the CR aims to provide a platform to people within their own community in
turn motivating a community initiative for a community cause, the radio
service is being seen as the communication medium for grass root population
in the near future.

An added plus is that it focuses on social issues in a light and
entertaining manner in the popular local dialect. Thus radio plays, dramas,
interviews and folk songs on child marriage, education, breast feeding,
neonatal health and women and child rights figure is a big way on its
programme line up.

With people’s participation getting a fillip through CR the region’s culture
and tradition based on Bundelkhandi dialects also gets preserved for
posterity in the long run. Its truly a community radio service for the
community of the region.

Anjali Singh - CNS
(The author is a UNICEF consultant and a senior journalist. She is also the
Director of Saaksham Foundation)
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