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Jan 11, 2024, 7:09:12 AM1/11/24
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Hits FM (Nepali: हट्स एफएम) is a radio station based in Kathmandu, Nepal. It is a subsidiary of Hits Nepal Pvt. Ltd., which was established in January 1996. It went on air in April 1996 and is currently available 24 hours a day on 91.2 MHz. Its philosophy is to hire presenters who are "fresh" - thus ensuring originality and also the ability to shape the presenters in accordance to overall goals and objectives of Hits Nepal Pvt. Ltd.[1]

It is one of the most listened-to FM stations in the country, with one of the highest-rated shows. It is ranked among the top 40 radio stations in the World (Asia, Africa, Australia, South America) by UK and Irish Radio Stations broadcasting on the Internet.[3]

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Hits FM currently has more than 40 radio presenters. A few of the notable radio presenters of Hits FM are: Mandira Dhungel, Kala Subba, Bipra Acharya, Supriya Pradhan, Arjun Ghimire, and Binu Khadga.[5]

Himalayan Radio is the first Nepalese voice in Australia established on 21st of February 2003 which was aired from Sydney for the first time on Radio Skid Row 88.9FM. It is the common voice of the Nepalese community. We present tp you the latest community news, sports updates, interviews, entertainment and more. We play a wide variety of Nepalese songs, and you are always welcome to request the song over the phone live or off air. We are open for any kind of respectful conversation and dialogue. It is a community radio, and our team is trying to give something back to the Nepalese community through our language, culture, and music. Please join us every Monday from 5 to 8pm AEST.

Working in Nepali and in English, and publishing on the NepalCheck website, these fact-checks are also shared with and published by local media outlets. Adhikari is regularly interviewed by local radio stations and this broadens the distribution of fact-checked information.

We were working with the BBC Nepali Service within hours of the earthquake to get lifesaving information to people in immediate need. Within a week, we launched Milijuli Nepali to provide earthquake-affected people with information about where to receive aid and how to stay safe and healthy. The fifteen minute programmes broadcast twice a day on the BBC Nepali Service on 103 FM in the Kathmandu Valley, Radio Nepal and on 400 other radio stations across Nepal - collectively reaching across the entire country.

For many years, BBC Media Action has been using radio to save lives and livelihoods after disasters and in times of crisis. Pre-disaster training delivered by BBC Media Action enabled several radio partners to begin broadcasting Lifeline programming within hours of the Nepal earthquake happening.

Training remains an important part of the project, providing local radio stations and humanitarian organisations with tailored editorial and technical support to allow them to produce local level Lifeline programmes.

The project also includes the production and broadcast of a new radio drama in collaboration with the national broadcaster for Nepal, Radio Nepal, titled Katha Maala (Garland of Stories). The drama aims to encourage communities in the earthquake affected areas to prepare for and respond to the challenges of the monsoon and winter seasons.

Our survey in 2018 examined how radio programming supported people in the 14 severely affected districts in Nepal. Key results showed that regular listeners of the programmes knew more and were more likely to take actions than non-listeners. However, concerns around financial support for reconstruction remained a key issue. The findings are published in the Progress in Disaster Science academic journal here.

The only radio program for the Nepalese community in Victoria began airing on 3CR in October 2003. Brought to you by the Nepalese Association of Victoria (NAV), the program has Nepali music, news and current affairs from Nepal, community announcements and discussion.

Tamil Christmas Appeal 9am-4pm Monday 25 December. Tamil Voice is holding their annual Radiothon on Christmas Day, to raise funds for disadvantaged Victorian Tamil students in need for Higher Education. Students who are in pending visa approval such as humanitarian or refugee visas do not have any support for education even if they had high VCE results for further studies. Victorian Tamil Association with the 3CR support are running this special Christmas radiothon.

Architect Kim In-cheurl of Seoul-based Archium developed the building for the Mustang Broadcasting Community (MBC), a radio station launched last year to serve residents and visitors in the remote Mustang region of north-west Nepal.

To protect employees and guests from the strong winds prevalent in the region, the building is enveloped in walls made from a local stone called gneiss that also helps the radio station merge with the surrounding landscape of rock-strewn mountains.

Nepali Radio Network (Radio NRN 99.1) is the news radio broadcasting arm of Radio NRN and brings its global Nepali audience the news on politics, business and economics, society, education, science, environment, sports and various other issues from Nepal. Radio NRN combines broadcasts at FM 99.1 MHz to reach Kathmandu Valley, broadcasts on satellite radio to reach the remainder of listeners in Nepal and South Asia and produces the news online to reach Nepali around the world.

The Home Affairs Department and Radio Television Hong Kong (RTHK) have jointly launched this radio programme in Nepali. Mr Chura Bahadur Thapa, being of Hong Kong Nepalese background, offers topics of interests and a collection of Nepalese popular music.

After 104 years of Rana rule in Nepal, Radio Nepal started broadcasting. Radio Nepal was the only radio station in Nepal for 45 years. After the restoration of the multi-party system in the country, the radio sector also entered the private sector. At present, the number of radios in Nepal has reached about 600.

In terms of physical infrastructure, there is no other radio station equal to Radio Nepal. However, there is government interference in this organization. Its chief executive and board of directors are appointed by the government.

In the past, song recording in Nepal could not be done except in Radio Nepal. To become a singer, one had to pass the vocal test from Radio Nepal. But today there is no such situation. Song recording facilities have been made available in many places in Nepal. But Radio Nepal has fallen behind from the work it has done in the past. It will also be successful if the old songs recorded in radio Nepal in the past as well as the speeches given by important people at different times can be safely kept.

Radio Nepal should speak the sentiments of the people. It should give priority to people's problems over minister's speeches. Radio Nepal should give priority to Voice of Voice of Less People. Which can make Radio Nepal people's favorite radio.

DJs may play their favorite playlists or talk about the songs on their playlist. Some DJs have podcasts to talk about relatable content or invite their friends as guest speakers. I have not yet hosted a radio show myself, but I am looking forward to hosting one next term and basing it on music creativity.

This update has not only covered the Nepali radios operating across the country and outside the country but has also included some amazing radio and some new and smart features that have not been used in the radio application yet.

The news can also be shared on various social networks, it said, adding that users can avail of the service, which covers programs and news of all popular local FM/radios of all the seven provinces on the same page of the radio.

Moreover, in this new update, the easy search for finding the radio is placed at the top, while the trending radios that are heard in the Nepali Patro, radios by province, radios with frequencies, and popular online radios that do not have a frequency but are online are also at the top of the application.

Prior to starting the radio show, girls were surveyed to understand their baseline knowledge and attitudes on child marriage, domestic violence, and other topics. After the multi-year program, the girls were surveyed again to determine if their perceptions had changed.

"Prasar Bharati has ordered AIR Kurseong to be upgraded to the hub of content generation and transmission of Nepali language broadcast in the country. Local musicians, singers, lyricists, writers, dramatists, news readers and producers and radio content creators will greatly benefit from this. It will be a blessing for everyone associated with Nepali language broadcast in our Darjeeling hills, Terai, Dooars and the rest of the northeastern region," Bista added.

By Krista Mahr and Ross Adkin CHARIKOT, Nepal (Reuters) - The Nepali army has been told a missing U.S. Marines helicopter with eight on board may have come down in a river in the Charikot area hit hard by an earthquake and 400 soldiers are engaged in the hunt, a senior officer said on Wednesday. "The info we have is that it is down in one of the rivers, but none of the choppers has seen it yet," Major Rajan Dahal, second-in-command of the Barda Bahadur Batallion, told Reuters in Charikot. "There are 400-plus of our ground troops looking for it also, by this evening, we might get it," he said. The Marine Corps UH-1Y Huey helicopter participating in earthquake relief operations lost radio contact on Tuesday after its crew was heard talking about fuel problems. (Writing by Frank Jack Daniel; Editing by Douglas Busvine)

On October 21, the government promulgated a new media ordinance containing restrictions on the media. According to a December report by the International Commission of Jurists, a Geneva-based international rule of law and human rights NGO, the ordinance entrenches a ban on news reporting by private FM radio stations, includes vague and arbitrary prohibitions on content, such as extending the prohibition on criticism of the king to other members of the royal family, restricts dissemination of news from foreign sources, enables a government-controlled press council to recommend to the government revoking a journalist's press credential, and places new restrictions on cross-media ownership that effectively targets only the Kantipur media organization, a consistent government critic that owns newspaper, television and radio outlets. Following the issuance of the ordinance, armed authorities raided Kantipur FM and seized satellite uplinking equipment. On November 27, authorities raided Sagarmatha FM and briefly arrested five staffers and also seized station equipment. The authorities later returned seized equipment to Sagarmatha and Kantipur.

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