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DW-TV (German pronunciation: [ˈdeːveːteːˈfaʊ̯]) is a German multilingual TV news network of Deutsche Welle. Focussing on news and informational programming, it first started broadcasting 1 April 1992. DW broadcasts on satellite and is uplinked from Berlin. DW's English broadcast service is aimed at an international audience.
In that capacity, she helped shape the news agenda for those leading programs and reported from many parts of the world including South Africa, Eritrea and the United Nations. Back in Nigeria, Ahmed served as the editor of Next, an award-winning publication. There, she supervised a newsroom of approximately 120 people and about 30 stringers and ...
In 2003, the German government passed a new "Deutsche Welle Act", which defined DW as a tri-media organization, making the Deutsche Welle website an equal partner with DW-TV and DW Radio. The website is available in 30 languages but focuses on German, English, Spanish, Russian, Brazilian Portuguese, Chinese, and Arabic.
The 30-minute program is also available nationwide on Link TV, [5] as well as on YouTube as DW English and DW Documentary. A DW livestream is available on DW's website. [6] In Australia it is broadcast live overnight on ABC News and on SBS as part of WorldWatch programming. It is also broadcast on SBS instead of missing or removed programs.
BBC Hausa was the first African-language service operated by the BBC and is one of the five African languages it broadcasts. The service was launched on 13 March 1957 at 09:30 GMT with a 15-minute programme by the BBC World Service presented by Aminu Abdullahi Malumfashi: a translated version was later read by Abubakar Tunau in the programme West Africa in the News.
Federal Radio Corporation of Nigeria Kaduna, formerly known as Radio Kaduna, was founded in 1962. It now has the largest radio listenership in sub-Saharan Africa. [1] The station broadcasts in Hausa, English, Nupe, and Kanuri. The Hausa programme can be heard in Kaduna state and worldwide on 6090 kHz shortwave, and
Conflict Zone is a TV programme broadcast by German broadcaster Deutsche Welle. Its host is Tim Sebastian , and its format is of a twenty-minute long interview with one guest per episode. History
BBC Africa Eye used more than 300 videos shot on protestors' phone at the Khartoum massacre on 3 June 2019 in Sudan to report on the killing of over 100 people. The documentary, Sudan's Livestream Massacre , exposed Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo , who previously ran the notorious government-backed Janjaweed militias, as ordering the massacre.