- Bangladeshi Hindus protest over leader's arrest, one dead
- Trump tariff vow drives choppy day for markets
- Celtic fuelled by Dortmund embarrassment: Rodgers
- Pakistan ex-PM Khan calls more protestors to capital after deadly clashes
- Salah driven not distracted by contract deadlock, says Slot
- Algeria holds writer Boualem Sansal on national security charges: lawyer
- Biden proposes huge expansion of weight loss drug access
- Saudi 2025 budget sees lower deficit on spending trims
- Pogba's brother, five others, on trial for blackmailing him
- Israel pounds Beirut as security cabinet discusses ceasefire plan
- Prosecutors seek up to 15-year terms for French rape trial defendants
- Emery bids to reverse Villa slump against Juventus
- Survivors, bodies recovered from capsized Red Sea tourist boat
- Carrefour attempts damage control against Brazil 'boycott'
- Namibians heads to the polls wanting change
- Sales of new US homes lowest in around two years: govt
- Paris mayor Hidalgo says to bow out in 2026
- Stocks, dollar mixed on Trump tariff warning
- ICC to decide fate of Pakistan's Champions Trophy on Friday
- Man Utd revenue falls as Champions League absence bites
- Russia vows reply after Ukraine strikes again with US missiles
- Trump threatens trade war on Mexico, Canada, China
- Motta's injury-hit Juve struggling to fire ahead of Villa trip
- Cycling chiefs seek WADA ruling on carbon monoxide use
- Israel pounds Beirut as security cabinet to discuss ceasefire
- Fewest new HIV cases since late 1980s: UNAIDS report
- 4 security forces killed as ex-PM Khan supporters flood Pakistan capital
- Four bodies, four survivors recovered from Egypt Red Sea sinking: governor
- Ayub century helps Pakistan crush Zimbabwe, level series
- French court cracks down on Corsican language use in local assembly
- Prosecutors seek up to 14-year terms for French rape trial defendants
- Russia expels UK diplomat accused of espionage
- Israeli security cabinet to discuss ceasefire as US says deal 'close'
- COP29 president blames rich countries for 'imperfect' deal
- Stocks retreat, dollar mixed on Trump tariff warning
- No regrets: Merkel looks back at refugee crisis, Russia ties
- IPL history-maker, 13, who 'came on Earth to play cricket'
- Ukraine says Russia using landmines to carry out 'genocidal activities'
- Prosecutors seek up to 12-year terms for French rape trial defendants
- 'Record' drone barrage pummels Ukraine as missile tensions seethe
- Laos hostel staff detained after backpackers' deaths
- Hong Kong LGBTQ advocate wins posthumous legal victory
- Ukraine says cannot meet landmine destruction pledge due to Russia invasion
- Rod Stewart to play Glastonbury legends slot
- Winter rains pile misery on war-torn Gaza's displaced
- 'Taiwan also has baseball': jubilant fans celebrate historic win
- Russia pummels Ukraine with 'record' drone barrage
- Paul Pogba blackmail trial set to open in Paris
- China's Huawei unveils 'milestone' smartphone with homegrown OS
- Landmine victims gather to protest US decision to supply Ukraine
RBGPF | 1.33% | 61 | $ | |
RYCEF | 0.44% | 6.8 | $ | |
RELX | 0.22% | 46.675 | $ | |
BTI | 0.61% | 37.56 | $ | |
NGG | -0.88% | 62.71 | $ | |
GSK | -0.71% | 33.91 | $ | |
CMSC | -0.65% | 24.57 | $ | |
BCE | -1.83% | 26.535 | $ | |
AZN | -0.17% | 66.285 | $ | |
BP | -1.66% | 28.84 | $ | |
RIO | -1.81% | 61.86 | $ | |
VOD | -0.62% | 8.855 | $ | |
SCS | -1.14% | 13.565 | $ | |
BCC | -3.06% | 147.965 | $ | |
JRI | -0.49% | 13.305 | $ | |
CMSD | -0.71% | 24.407 | $ |
Lviv radio gets 'new mission' after Russian invasion
The Lvivska Khvylya local radio station in west Ukraine changed its broadcast output dramatically the day Russia invaded the country.
The first thing staff did was to ease off on the entertainment programming and ramp up coverage of the war for their tens of thousands of listeners.
"We are an entertainment and music radio station but we're doing a lot of news because citizens need a lot of information in these times," Volodymyr Melnyk, a 28-year-old host on Lvivska Khvylya ("Wave of Lviv"), told AFP.
He was speaking in the station's brand-new studio in Lviv, a city 80 kilometres (50 miles) from the Polish border.
Between Ukrainian pop hits, Melnyk and his colleague Andryi Antoniuk, 41, lighten the mood with quips about the conflict.
"In times of war, we need to be positive. We can make fun of Putin and of the Russian troops who can't take our cities, but we can't have so much fun as we had before the war," says Melnyk who has been working for the station for eight years.
Years before Russia sent troops to Ukraine on February 24, the station had already once before pivoted to war.
Staff shook up their programming in 2014, when Moscow annexed the Crimean peninsula from Ukraine and threw its weight behind separatists in the east of the country.
-'Psychological factor' -
"The war affected our work, because there is a psychological factor that initially prevented us from working," says Marta Oliyarnyk, a 27-year-old journalist.
"All these events could not leave us indifferent," she said behind a large pair sunglasses.
In 24 days of war, the station -- which has been on air for around 30 years -- has become an even more crucial link between its listeners and the authorities.
Before the war it boasted between 300,000 and 400,000 listeners per day. That figure has now doubled.
Those listeners are served up news on school closures and also on the humanitarian situation in the city.
They also get updates on fierce fighting in the south and east of the country.
Oliyarnyk says she aims to find a balance between local and national news on the 5:00 pm news broadcast for Lviv listeners, a task she likens to a "public service mission".
The station runs its own programming until 7:00 pm, at which point it hands over state-sponsored conflict coverage.
To boost morale, news of civilian and military casualties is not the focus of broadcasts.
"These figures frighten us. We experience it personally, but we try to give people a lot of positive information, such as what losses to the enemy and how many units of military equipment were destroyed by our military."
The true human toll, she says, can only be properly calculated when fighting ends.
- 'Critical infrastructure' -
Several times a day, sirens interrupt the broadcasts.
On Friday morning, Vasyl Pakuch, the station's 31-year-old technical director, broadcast the alarm from his home, calling on the population to go to the shelters.
That day, local authorities said Russian missiles had hit Lviv's regional airport district, an attack that did not lead to any casualties.
From his small office, that overlooks the studio, Pakuch monitors the dozens of broadcast towers that send out Wave of Lviv around western Ukraine and as far east as Kyiv.
The tower nearest the capital, whose outskirts have been caught up in fierce fighting, has been damaged by Russian strikes twice.
Another was hit during strikes on Rivne on March 14 that left nine dead.
"These towers are critical infrastructure. It's dangerous for the population when they're attacked because the connection is lost," says Pakuch, gesturing to the Lviv tower.
He says he would go to any length to repair it if it were damaged.
"Even if, God forbid, they destroy a tower, we will climb a tree with an antenna and we will still turn on the radio wherever we are. It's not a problem," he says.
O.Lorenz--BTB