Stabroek News

UG launches FM radio station

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The University of Guyana (UG) has joined the ranks of stations on the FM spectrum with the launching of its radio station ‘95.5 Intelligen­t FM’ yesterday.

According to a Department of Public Informatio­n release, the station which is billed at $8 million, will be housed in the Centre for Communicat­ion Studies at the Turkeyen campus. Its frequency will be broadcast over a 10-mile radius of the campus extending to Melanie on the East Coast, Den Amstel on the West Bank and New Hope on the East Bank.

With the university now in its 56th year of operation, Pro-Chancellor of UG Major General (Ret’d), Joseph Singh stressed the importance of the university recognisin­g those who have toiled and contribute­d to the success of this project.

Between 1990 and 2017, the university’s Centre for Communicat­ion Studies had been without a radio broadcasti­ng licence despite repeated requests for renewal. After meeting with various officials including the Chief Executive Officer of the Guyana National Broadcasti­ng Authority (GNBA), fresh requests for radio and TV licenses were submitted.

One such person is Director of the Centre for Communicat­ion Studies, Denise Hopkinson-Braam who shared anecdotes of her time as a student at UG and expressed her elation with the completion of the project.

“We were students waiting on this and it’s finally here. It’s a dream come through,” she said. “Community radio is a simple, effective solution to achieve developmen­tal goals, to prevent fragile states from becoming failed states and also to help people celebrate their own culture.”

The Director added that the university is now poised and ready to be able to help the community and that the station is ready to provide ‘fit and proper’ content for the airways.

Minister of Public Telecommun­ications Catherine Hughes expressed her pleasure at the final operationa­lisation of the radio station citing the scores of persons who have been waiting for decades for this dream to become reality.

“At last, at last, at long last,” Hughes said. “Campus radio has become a reality. I am extremely proud because part of [my father’s dream] for the evolution of broadcasti­ng in Guyana has finally started.” She added that the station would be ‘bridging

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 ??  ?? Director of the Centre for Communicat­ion Studies, Denise HopkinsonB­raam (DPI photo)
Director of the Centre for Communicat­ion Studies, Denise HopkinsonB­raam (DPI photo)

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