Tag: transmitter

  • JUNE 30, 2021 UPDATE

    JUNE 30, 2021 UPDATE

    COMMEMORATION Romania’s Parliament convened in a solemn session on Wednesday to
    commemorate the victims of the Pogrom in Iasi, north-eastern Romania, 80 years
    ago. At that time over 13 thousand Jews were tortured and killed by the pro-Nazi
    regime led by Ion Antonescu. Speaking in the opening of the event, the
    president of the Romanian Senate Anca Dragu said, quote: ‘This is a moment of
    introspection and reflection, a moment when we directly assume this tragic
    event in the history of our country but at the same time, a moment when we become aware of the historical consequences of xenophobic and racist attitudes’. In
    turn, Romania’s Prime Minister Florin Citu has described the Iasi pogrom as a ‘dark
    page’ in Romania’s history and underlined the idea of assuming the
    past. Also attending the Parliament session, Musi-Mihail Cernea, one of the
    survivors, recollected the horrific moments 80 years ago. President Klaus Iohannis Wednesday awarded
    the Faithful Service National Order, in the rank of Knight, to Musi-Mihail
    Cernea, Jehuda Evron and Moshe Yassur, survivors of the Iaşi Pogrom of June
    1941. The 3 were decorated as a show of respect for the suffering experience
    during WW2, for their high moral standards throughout their lives and their
    efforts to preserve the memory of the victims of the Holocaust, a tragedy that
    must never repeat, reads a news release issued by the Presidential Administration.








    FOOTBALL Romania’s Football Federation has announced the line-up of the
    Under-23 side to represent the country at the Olympic Games in Tokyo. Romania
    has been included in group B and will be up against Honduras on July 22nd,
    South Korea three days later, and New Zealand on July 28th. Romania
    has qualified for the Tokyo Olympics after having played in the semi-finals of
    the European Under-21 Championship held in Italy and San Marino in 2019.






    TRANSMITTER Radiocom, the company
    broadcasting Radio Romania International’s programmes, has announced a new series
    of repair works carried out on a transmitter in Tiganesti, close to Bucharest. The
    company is stepping up efforts to mend the transmitter and render it operational
    by August this year. Unfortunately, the defective transmitter is presently affecting
    the RRI English transmissions beamed to New York, Los Angeles, London, Tokyo
    and Australia, the transmissions in French to Montreal and Central Africa, in
    Russian to Moscow and Novosibirsk, in German to Berlin, in Spanish to Mexico,
    Madrid, Buenos Aires and Brazil and in Chinese to Beijing.








    CERTIFICATE A web page where Romanian and foreign citizens can obtain digital
    COVID-19 certificates is to become available starting July 1st, the
    Special Telecommunication Service (STS) has announced. The user-friendly application,
    which is called certificate-covid.gov.ro, allows people to get the certificate
    in less than 10 steps. According to the institution, its experts who developed
    the entire information system, have made the latest optimizations in accordance
    with the provisions of the ordinance endorsed by the government in Bucharest.
    The Covid certificate, which allows for the free movement inside the EU has a
    one-year validity for those who got the vaccine, and only a couple of hours for
    those who took rapid or PCR tests. 52 new infections have been reported in the
    past 24 hours in Romania after 26 thousand tests have been carried out. 33,786
    people have been killed by the virus in Romania since the beginning of the
    pandemic.






    (bill)





  • National Radio Day, celebrated on November 1st

    National Radio Day, celebrated on November 1st

    The
    first signal broadcast from the studios in Bucharest on November 1st,
    1928, heralded the existence of a Romanian radio voice, at that time unique around
    the world. It was the voice by means of which the world got info about Romania,
    about the Romanian society, about its experience or ideals. The Romanian Broadcasting
    Corporation, through its programs, has always catered for a series of needs of
    Romanian society as a whole. The country’s economic, political, social and
    cultural life reflected itself on Hertzian wavelengths, it has also reached out
    to listeners via radio broadcasts as well. This is what the historian Eugen
    Denize wrote, in his 5-volume history of the Romanian Radio Broadcasting
    Corporation. Radio Romania has been broadcasting for more than nine decades now.
    Speaking at the microphone were political personalities, but also such
    prominent novelists, poets or literary critics, as Mihail Sadoveanu, Tudor
    Arghezi, or G. Călinescu, or the historians Andrei Oţetea and C.C. Giurescu, as
    well as many others. Radio Romania had a 16-year long history before the
    instatement of the communist regime in the counry. In its short democratic
    history back then, Radio Romania faithfully fulfilled its initial aim and
    purpose.

    Shortly
    after Radio Romania’s first broadcast, foreign language programmes were also
    broadcast by the Romanian Radio Broadcasting Corporation. Such programmes were
    thought out to inform the diplomatic corps in Romania’s capital city. In 1932,
    radio listeners could hear the first broadcasts in French and English. These
    were news reels and current affairs programmes. In the Second World War years,
    Radio Romania’s foreign services kept foreigners informed about the most recent
    progress of the operations on the frontline, and about the population’s state
    of mind. After World war Two, Radio Romania’s foreign languages service became
    more important. The Foreign Broadcast Editorial Office was founded, while
    speakers of foreign languages or native speakers were employed to propagandize
    the new communist Romania.


    Liliana
    Museteanu was head of Radio Romania’s
    written archives. She outlined the early days of radio broadcasts in Bucharest.

    Liliana Museteanu:


    The early days of radio broadcasting can be placed in 1925, the year
    when the Radio Broadcasting Friends’ Association was founded, it was the creation
    of a group of prominent specialists in the field, headed by professor Dragomir
    Hurmuzescu, who can quite aptly be called the father of Romanian
    broadcasting. The association made the first broadcasts from the building of
    the Bucharest Polytechnic’s Electrotechnical Institute, broadcasts were scarce
    at the beginning, targeting a very limited zone, mainly in Bucharest. The year
    1927 is the year when even a broadcast station was built, also on the premises
    at the Electrotechnical Institute, yet it was actually a precursor of the
    national radio broadcaster, because in late 1928, through a royal decree, the
    Romanian Society of Radio-telephony Broadcasting was established. In 1928, a
    building had been purchased, even prior to the beginning of broadcasts in
    November, it was a building located in 60 Berthelot street, a very beautiful
    and elegant building, but which soon turned out to be not big enough for its
    initial purpose.


    A
    different period of time in the history of radio Romania began after 1945. It
    would last until 1989. It was a period of blatant violation of basic human
    rights, all throughout the communist regime. In much the same way as the press
    as a whole and the state apparatus, Radio Romania also became part and parcel
    of the communist societal model. Its initial mission was fatefully altered.
    According to the historian Eugen Denize, the instatement of the communist
    power in Romania, for the Romanian Radio Broadcasting Corporation meant a
    complete rift with the past. First of all, from a managerial point of view, the
    Society underwent a groundbreaking transformation and became a state
    institution.


    The
    premises that, in time, played host to Romanian radio broadcasting, changed,
    today’s building being the third since the foundation of Radio Romania. The
    development of radio broadcasting required the allocation of supplementary
    premises for that purpose. Today, Radio Romania’s premises can be found on 60-64
    General Berthelot street. The street bears the name of an illustrious French
    general, the head of the French mission dispatched in Romania in 1917.

    Liliana Museteanu:

    The building from where the main broadcasts were operated, located on 60
    General Berthelot street, became increasingly hard to manage, precisely because
    of the technical circumstances. The air raids on August 23, 1944, seriously
    affected the building in General Berthelot street, and then the Society had to relocate
    to different quarters. Part of the broadcasts were operated from an attic in
    Sf. Sava College, which was especially changed to fit that purpose, and from
    Bod. The station in Baneasa was destroyed during the air raids.

    In the
    years to come, the building on 60 Berthelot Street was refurbished in 1947. But
    the new project, today’s Radio House, is the creation of a team of architects
    and engineers headed by architect Tiberiu Ricci and engineer Leon Garcia. The House
    of Radio Broadcasting was inaugurated on November 27, 1952. It was thought out
    as a radio broadcasting production center, capable of catering for all needs. Two
    studios were brought into service, with a capacity of 550 cubic meters each, as
    well as two other studios, with a capacity of 120 cubic meters. Added to them
    were two radio drama studios, 14 recording studios and 11 technical studios,
    Radio Romania’s Concert hall was inaugurated in 1960. It had a special
    acoustics, arguably being one of the great achievements of that time.


    (Translation by Eugen Nasta)













  • Transmitter out of order

    Transmitter out of order

    1 of the 5 short wave transmitters that beam RRI’s broadcasts is not working. The transmitter in Tiganesti, BD 300-1 near Bucharest, is still out of order. RADIOCOM, our broadcasting service provider, has announced that it will take up to several months to replace the broken components.



    In exchange, another short wave transmitter, in Galbeni, in the northeast of Romania, ID 300-1, has been repaired and is currently working.



    Due to the failure of the transmitter in Tiganesti, the digital broadcasting (standard DRM) of some RRI programs in English, French, German and Russian has also been disturbed. Meanwhile, we are kindly asking you to tune in for RRI’s short-wave broadcasts on the second frequency which we listed on the frequency schedule, as RRI usually broadcasts its programs on two frequencies to one target area. You’ll find the frequency schedule on RRI’s webpage www.rri.ro, under the ‘Frequencies’ button.



    We are sorry for any inconvenience and hope the situation will be remedied soon!

  • Transmitter out of order

    Transmitter out of order

    1 of the 5 short wave transmitters that beam RRI’s broadcasts is not working. The transmitter in Tiganesti, BD 300-1 near Bucharest, is still out of order. RADIOCOM, our broadcasting service provider, has announced that it will take up to several months to replace the broken components.



    In exchange, another short wave transmitter, in Galbeni, in the northeast of Romania, ID 300-1, has been repaired and is currently working.



    Due to the failure of the transmitter in Tiganesti, the digital broadcasting (standard DRM) of some RRI programs in English, French, German and Russian has also been disturbed. Meanwhile, we are kindly asking you to tune in for RRI’s short-wave broadcasts on the second frequency which we listed on the frequency schedule, as RRI usually broadcasts its programs on two frequencies to one target area. You’ll find the frequency schedule on RRI’s webpage www.rri.ro, under the ‘Frequencies’ button.



    We are sorry for any inconvenience and hope the situation will be remedied soon!