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In May 1992 Radio Banja Luka became the information-technical center for Bosnian Serb broadcasting, whose main office was in Pale. In December 1994, Serbian radio-television (Српска радио-телевизија (СРТ) / Srpska radio-televizija (SRT)) was founded, and programs from Banja Luka TV and radio studios were broadcast on ...
Radio Television of Kosovo (Albanian: Radiotelevizioni i Kosovës; [a] Serbian: Радио-телевизија Косова, romanized: Radio-televizija Kosova; RTK) is the public service broadcaster in Kosovo. It was founded after the Kosovo War, replacing the equipment and property of the RTS branch in Pristina. [1]
The Radio Television of Pristina was the first Albanian-speaking broadcaster in Kosovo, founded in 1974 following Radio Pristina's founding in 1945. It was forcefully shut down in 1990 by the Yugoslavian government , forbidding the flow of information through Kosovan airwaves during the Kosovo War .
RTK 2 (English: Radio Television of Kosovo 2, Serbian: Радио Телевизија Косова 2 / Radio Televizija Kosova 2, Albanian: Radio Televizioni i Kosovës 2) is the second public television channel of Kosovo, providing news and shows.
Radio Iliria: 104,1 Vitomiricë Vitomirica Radio Hayat 95,4 Vushtrri: Vučitrn: Radio Vicianum 105,7 Zubin Potok: Zubin Potok: Radio Kolašin 89,1 Zubin Potok: Zubin Potok: Radio M 102,5 Zveçani: Zvečan: Radio AS 101,4 Zveçani: Zvečan: Radio Kosovska Mitrovica 103,3
RTÉ Radio 1 (current affairs and speech based broadcasting); RTÉ 2fm (rock and pop music); RTÉ lyric fm (classical music plus jazz, world music and arts); RTÉ Raidió na Gaeltachta (the Irish language station targeted at the Gaeltacht, and the Irish language-speaking community of Ireland)
NATO Headquarters justified the bombing with two arguments; firstly, that it was necessary "to disrupt and degrade the command, control and communications network" of the Yugoslav Armed Forces, and secondly, that the RTS headquarters was a dual-use object which "was making an important contribution to the propaganda war which orchestrated the campaign against the population of Kosovo".
Kohavision (shortened to KTV, previously also Koha Vision) is a Kosovan free-to-air television channel launched on September 21, 2000. [2] It was founded by politician and journalist Veton Surroi as part of KOHA Group, a media house currently led by Flaka Surroi.