Radio Nacional de la R.A.S.D. explained

Radio Nacional de la R.A.S.D.
الاذاعة الوطنية للجمهورية العربية الصحراوية الديمقراطية
Area:North Africa, Europe, Americas
Airdate:28 December 1975
Frequency:1550 kHz - Sahrawi refugee camps
Repeater:7460 kHz - Bir Lehlou
Format:News, talk and music
Language:Arabic, Spanish
Power:100 kW
Owner:Polisario Front
Website:www.rasdradio.info

Radio Nacional de la Republica Árabe Saharaui Democrática (in Arabic: الاذاعة الوطنية للجمهورية العربية الصحراوية الديمقراطية; in English: National Radio of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic) is the state-owned public radio broadcaster of the Sahrawi Republic.[1]

Background and establishment

"Radio Nacional de la RASD" started broadcasting on 28 December 1975, shortly after the beginning of the Western Sahara War. Previously, some emissions had been made from supportive radio stations in Algiers and Tripoli, as "La Voz del Sáhara Libre" (The Voice of Free Sahara). In the first months of the station and due to the war situation, the first transmissions were made from moving trucks, with very limited airplay.[2]

In 1977 the first studios and archive were inaugurated in the Sahrawi refugee camps, while in late 1978 the power of the station rose to 20 kW, transmitting to all Western Sahara, Morocco, Algeria and part of Mauritania. In 1991 the station upgraded to 100 kW (its actual power), with a transmitting tower of 120 m.

Notes and References

  1. http://www.clandestineradio.com/intel/station.php?id=199&stn=151 Intel: Western Sahara (de facto) National Radio of the Arab-Saharan Democratic Republic
  2. Web site: Radio Nacional de la RASD. LEFRIG.org. 3 May 2013. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304025740/http://www.lefrig.org/?cont=gloobal&acc=ficha&entidad=Agentes&id=12257. 4 March 2016.