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Europa Plus spans across Russia, Latvia, Belarus, Ukraine, [3] Moldova, Armenia, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and Kyrgyzstan. The station broadcasts on over 230 transmitters and on the Intersputnik Express 6 and Intelsat 904 satellites. In many towns, Europa Plus has local programming in addition to replaying programming from the main ...
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The headquarters of Jurnal TV are in Chisinau, Moldova. Jurnal TV is part of the Jurnal Trust Media Holding, which includes the radio station Jurnal FM, the newspaper Jurnal de Chișinău, the economic magazine ECOnomist and the publicity agency Reforma Art. Jurnal TV HD is the first High Definition (1080i) television channel in Moldova.
Broadcasting media included in 2009 166 cable operators, 38 terrestrial TV channels and 50 radio stations. The TV is seen daily by 83.4% of the population (compared to 51.4% for the radio) and remains the main source of information for 72.9% of Moldovans (the radio only for 8.9% of them). [3] Media pluralism has improved recently.
TeleRadio-Moldova (TRM) is the Moldovan state-owned national radio and television broadcaster. It owns two TV channels and three radio stations. TRM was admitted as a full active member of the European Broadcasting Union on 1 January 1993, under its former name Radioteleviziunea Nationala din Moldova (RTNM).
Retro FM – Russia, Latvia (Riga, Liepaja, Rezekne and Daugavpils), Moldova (Cishinau FM and DAB+), Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan; Novoe Radio – Russia, Moldova (FM-network and Cishinau DAB+) and Tajikistan (Dushanbe and Khujand) Radio 7 – Russia and Chishinau (Moldova) Eldoradio – Saint-Petersburg (Russia) and Almaty (Kazakhstan)
Television in Moldova was introduced in 1958. From 2022 it became illegal to retransmit television and radio programmes with informative, analytical, military, or political content, produced in states that have not ratified the European Convention regulation on cross-border television.
At the end of the 1960s, the Soviet Union began building a powerful radio broadcasting station for propaganda to Western countries in Grigoriupol. [4] Construction work on this facility with an area of 950 hectares (3¾ sq. mi.), which hoisted at the beginning of the 1990s over 20 transmitters working in the short-and mediumwave range, took place between 1968 and 1975.