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Von: BueschelW@web.de im Auftrag von Wolfgang Bueschel ...

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SWEDEN Radio Swe<strong>de</strong>n Ends English on 31 Oct. 2010.<br />

Swedish Radio's international broadcasts on short and medium wave will<br />

close down from October 31, 2010. This is part of a <strong>de</strong>cision by Swedish<br />

Radio's management on our output and distribution announced on March 16<br />

this year.<br />

This means that from October 31, Radio Swe<strong>de</strong>n's programming in English<br />

will be broadcast nationally (on FM), as well as available on the<br />

Internet, and our podcast will be available here and on iTunes for<br />

downloading.<br />

"I want to strengthen our quality and competence, including in Arabic,<br />

which is the most <strong>im</strong>portant language for new arrivals in Swe<strong>de</strong>n", says<br />

Ingemar Loefgren, head of SR International. "It is <strong>im</strong>portant to strengthen<br />

the broadcasts for the listener groups who need it the most, such as<br />

Somalis. In addition I want to give a higher profile to the official<br />

minority language Romani, which will shortly start daily broadcasts."<br />

From the Fall Swedish Radio's output in <strong>im</strong>migrant languages will change,<br />

with resources concentrated on fewer languages than previously. This is<br />

the result of the latest review of SR International's programming. Swedish<br />

Radio will also be ending broadcasts in short and medium wave, and will<br />

instead concentrate on Internet webcasting.<br />

"The number of languages broadcast by Swedish Radio has changed over t<strong>im</strong>e,<br />

in or<strong>de</strong>r to adapt to changes in the world around us," says Swedish Radio's<br />

Program Director Bjoern Loefdahl. "This is the way it is now, and will be<br />

in the future."<br />

"We have to be where the audience is, and today our audience in the rest<br />

of the world is on the Web," Bjoern Loefdahl continues. "It doesn't feel<br />

relevant to broadcast on short or medium wave, and it isn't economically<br />

<strong>de</strong>fendable or journalistically justified. Now the money can be directed to<br />

where it is nee<strong>de</strong>d."<br />

After the latest review, Swedish Radio will broadcast in the following<br />

languages from October 31, 2010:<br />

English - FM and web<br />

Finnish - FM and web<br />

Meaenkieli (Tornedalen Finnish) - FM and web<br />

Sami - FM and web<br />

Romani - FM and web<br />

Arabic - FM and web<br />

Somali - FM and web<br />

Persian - FM and web<br />

Kurdish - FM and web<br />

German - web<br />

Russian - web<br />

The following language services will close:<br />

Albanian<br />

Assyrian/Aramaic<br />

Bosnian-Croatian-Serbian<br />

file:///E|/datentransfer/wwdfxc_2010/bcdx986.txt[06.01.2011 12:41:04]

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