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Studio IjamboCountry
Burundi
Programme SummaryCommunication StrategiesStudio Ijambo ("wise words" in Kirundi) employs Hutu and Tutsi staff to produce about 15 hours a week of radio news, public affairs, and cultural programming. These programmes, offered in Burundi's national language, Kirundi, as well as in French, deal with current events and processes related to Burundi's transitional period. Messages about social and political change are integrated into the development of characters and story lines. For example, one radio drama features a Hutu family and a Tutsi family who live next door to each other. Entitled Umubanyi Niwe Muryango (Our Neighbors, Ourselves), this drama aims to help listeners identify with problems faced by others and to devise positive, non-violent ways of resolving conflicts. Other programmes offered include:
The studio's website, http://www.studioijambo.org, offers five weekly programmes in streaming audio. The programmes are added to the website soon after their on-air broadcast in Burundi. Development IssuesConflict, Social and Political Development, Rights. Key PointsStudio Ijambo was formed in the aftermath of the Rwandan genocide of 1994, during which the 'hate' radio broadcasts of Radio Mille Collines fomented ethnic violence. In neighbouring Burundi, many feared a similar outbreak of genocide. Ethnic tensions were high, Hutu-Tutsi relations polarised, and violence a daily occurrence. Rumours and lies fuelled the environment of hatred and mistrust.Created in 1995, Studio Ijambo was a direct response to this climate of fear. It was a recognition of the power of radio to affect hearts and minds, as in Rwanda, but this time towards peace and reconciliation. Since 1993, at least 200,000 Burundians have been killed in the civil war. In reporting on this violence, Studio Ijambo's mixed Hutu and Tutsi team of journalists work to present a face of ethnic unity otherwise absent in the society. Rather than a Hutu journalist reporting on killings by Tutsis, or vice versa, journalists report on violence committed by their own ethnic group. Eighty-five percent of the population has access to radios; Studio Ijambo reaches an estimated 12 million people throughout the Great Lakes region. A 1999 evaluation revealed that over 90 percent of Burundian radio listeners described the radio dramas as dealing with true-to-life issues in a way that brings Burundians together. In 2000, 82 percent of those surveyed said that Studio Ijambo's programmes help reconciliation 'a lot'. The recipient of several awards, Studio Ijambo was the subject of a story by the United States ABC-TV news program Nightline. Its broadcasts are used regularly by other news organisations such as Reuters, the BBC, and Voice of America. ContactAdrien Sindayigaya
Country Director
Search for Common Ground in Burundi
B.P. 6180
Bujumbura
Burundi
Tel: +(257) 217 195
Fax: +(257) 217 189
SourceLetter sent from Lena Slachmuijlder to the Communication Initiative on January 30, 2002; and Search for Common Ground site. Placed on the Soul Beat Africa site February 15 2002 Last Updated March 30 2009 How useful did you find the knowledge and contacts on this page to your work? Post your comments (review comments from others below):COMMENTS POSTEDTop 5 Related Pages for this Summary |
Broadcast Edutainment
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