Berliner Boersenzeitung - Lviv radio gets 'new mission' after Russian invasion

EUR -
AED 4.301903
AFN 81.398756
ALL 97.69198
AMD 449.541153
ANG 2.096061
AOA 1074.019088
ARS 1467.056665
AUD 1.791366
AWG 2.108216
AZN 1.986734
BAM 1.957339
BBD 2.364659
BDT 142.762253
BGN 1.956891
BHD 0.441464
BIF 3444.590159
BMD 1.171231
BND 1.50028
BOB 8.092363
BRL 6.431158
BSD 1.171421
BTN 100.312875
BWP 15.647303
BYN 3.832714
BYR 22956.126187
BZD 2.35245
CAD 1.603351
CDF 3380.17277
CHF 0.931245
CLF 0.028982
CLP 1112.15376
CNY 8.409732
CNH 8.413163
COP 4703.639982
CRC 590.664434
CUC 1.171231
CUP 31.03762
CVE 110.665791
CZK 24.657046
DJF 208.151313
DKK 7.461373
DOP 70.449949
DZD 152.034004
EGP 58.100553
ERN 17.568464
ETB 159.785208
FJD 2.632049
FKP 0.862924
GBP 0.861744
GEL 3.173426
GGP 0.862924
GHS 12.181533
GIP 0.862924
GMD 83.745873
GNF 10138.174805
GTQ 9.001077
GYD 244.912572
HKD 9.193987
HNL 30.861567
HRK 7.53746
HTG 153.710861
HUF 399.666737
IDR 19036.016272
ILS 3.892065
IMP 0.862924
INR 100.368342
IQD 1534.312516
IRR 49338.102586
ISK 143.428823
JEP 0.862924
JMD 187.217207
JOD 0.830404
JPY 171.369815
KES 151.674858
KGS 102.424149
KHR 4709.519813
KMF 492.434455
KPW 1054.082085
KRW 1609.693029
KWD 0.357648
KYD 0.975967
KZT 607.347552
LAK 25240.02674
LBP 104942.291169
LKR 352.086843
LRD 234.824581
LSL 20.836748
LTL 3.45834
LVL 0.708466
LYD 6.326826
MAD 10.546941
MDL 19.850608
MGA 5188.55303
MKD 61.557912
MMK 2459.007984
MNT 4203.031473
MOP 9.469546
MRU 46.503735
MUR 52.935147
MVR 18.041423
MWK 2033.845342
MXN 21.794089
MYR 4.97832
MZN 74.911584
NAD 20.835958
NGN 1796.469252
NIO 43.042624
NOK 11.824121
NPR 160.5002
NZD 1.953233
OMR 0.450338
PAB 1.171121
PEN 4.151429
PGK 4.831292
PHP 66.295771
PKR 332.922636
PLN 4.244834
PYG 9077.137268
QAR 4.263986
RON 5.077405
RSD 117.152362
RUB 91.446998
RWF 1679.545151
SAR 4.392973
SBD 9.764464
SCR 16.52723
SDG 703.318229
SEK 11.147156
SGD 1.49965
SHP 0.920404
SLE 26.346722
SLL 24560.131235
SOS 669.355427
SRD 43.628939
STD 24242.115502
SVC 10.247057
SYP 15228.496616
SZL 20.836041
THB 38.263863
TJS 11.330809
TMT 4.111021
TND 3.394612
TOP 2.743138
TRY 46.887455
TTD 7.952253
TWD 34.203437
TZS 3077.407246
UAH 48.95159
UGX 4204.305806
USD 1.171231
UYU 47.377252
UZS 14903.913567
VES 131.514945
VND 30614.805225
VUV 139.732445
WST 3.224823
XAF 656.473179
XAG 0.032216
XAU 0.000354
XCD 3.16531
XDR 0.815275
XOF 652.375675
XPF 119.331742
YER 283.261981
ZAR 20.830629
ZMK 10542.484093
ZMW 28.4884
ZWL 377.135881
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Lviv radio gets 'new mission' after Russian invasion
Lviv radio gets 'new mission' after Russian invasion

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.

Text size:

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.

(K.Lüdke--BBZ)