The Ladakh incursion may be recent, but the Middle Kingdom has been making 
quiet inroads into the Indian mindspace for a long time. After securing a large 
Indian footprint with powerful cross-border radio broadcasts and a vernacular 
bonanza via shortwave, China is all set to pump the volume.

The external service of China Radio International (CRI) beams content in Hindi, 
Bengali, Urdu, Tamil and other Indian languages and is believed to be beefing 
up the portfolio. The station is planning to add Gujarati, Punjabi and 
Malayalam to its external service menu soon, official sources told FE. CRI is 
also believed to be planning to set up a local office, subject to government 
approval, to meet its expansion plans.
Such ‘legal’ shortwave broadcasts come on top of China-backed radio stations in 
Nepal beaming programmes in Hindi dialects, reaching up to 100 km across the 
border into the villages of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar.
The northern neighbour’s experiments in moulding public opinion across the 
border have
not gone unnoticed. The enhanced signal strength from the Nepal stations has 
been of particular concern, said a senior official.
“All India Radio (AIR) has been told to beef up its transmission network to 
counter this threat. Around R400 crore have been sanctioned in this year’s 
Budget to tackle the cross-border communication influx,” he said.
Apart from improved cross-border beaming, the external service of All India 
Radio is also set for an overhaul. Programming and the technical improvements 
in AIR external services in Ladakh and all along
he Nepal and China border are on cards. Currently, AIR broadcasts its external 
services in 27 foreign languages via shortwave. However, these attempts may be 
no match for CRI which broadcasts in over 60 languages, reaching most countries 
in the world, armed with a half-billion-dollar-strong budget.
Already, cheap Chinese-made multi-functional radio sets have flooded the 
markets in the villages and towns in northern Bihar and Eastern Uttar Pradesh.
Last week, Cai Jun, deputy director of the Tamil department of CRI based in 
Beijing told visiting foreign journalists that the station wants the FM radio 
network in Tamil Nadu to broadcast some of its content in Tamil. CRI Tamil 
Service also has plans to launch its own FM service in India. However, current 
FDI policy in FM radio sector caps foreign investmentsfor the upcoming 
third-phase expansion at 26%.
“The easiest legal way for any foreign radio broadcaster to enter Indian FM 
space is through content sharing. But the content has to be compelling for both 
listeners and advertisers,” said a senior executive of the association of radio 
operators in India (AROI), the apex body of private FM broadcasters.
CRI’s Tamil service is in India for over three years broadcasting on shortwave 
across Tamil Nadu, and is planning to launch more Indian language services.
“More languages means more Indian radio professionals may be need to work out 
of Beijing. With the third-phase of FM radio auctions expected soon, foreign 
media companies may look to participate through joint ventures, either before 
or after auctions,” said the AROI executive.
MADE IN CHINA, HEARD IN INDIA
* CRI broadcasts in Indian languages, Nepali stations beam in Hindi
* CRI founded in 1941, earlier known as Radio Beijing, Radio Peking
* Global presence in 60+ languages using 50+ shortwave transmitters
* Competes with BBC World Service, Voice of America in US, Europe
* CRI Hindi service since 1959; dedicated Hindi,Tamil websites
* CRI Nepal re-transmits India-centric programmes into Bihar, UP and Ladakh via 
Nepali FM stations
Source:http://www.financialexpress.com
++++++++++++++++++++++
Jaisakthivel, ADXC, India, www.dxquiz.wordpress.com
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