Voice of America began boosting broadcasts to Burundi where at least 14
people have been and killed and more than 200 injured in protests against
President Pierre Nkurunziza running for a third term.
VOA has additional
shortwave and FM broadcasts in Kirundi, Kinyarwanda, Kiswahili, French, and
English with an expanded call-in show, more reporting from the ground, and new
drive-time newscasts.
"At this critical moment for democracy in Burundi, we
are stepping up to keep our audiences informed, " says VOA Director David Ensor.
"Voters deserve to know what is going on with presidential elections just one
month away."
The African Union and the United States say the Nkurunziza
candidacy violates a regional peace deal that ended civil war in 2005. U.S.
Secretary of State John Kerry says the president's move "flies directly in the
face of the constitution of his country."
President Nkurunziza says he is
exempt from the two-term limit because his first term was chosen by
parliament.
VOA is one of the last remaining sources of news in Burundi after
authorities blocked access to social media, closed Radio Publique Africane, and
suspended relay transmissions for two other independently owned stations --
Bonesha FM and Isanganiro.
The Committee to Protect Journalists condemns this
harassment and says the Nkurunziza government is "blatantly trying to gag"
coverage of its opponents.
VOA is adding reporters in Burundi and Rwanda
along with additional staff in Washington D.C., where its U.S. government-funded
transmissions originate.
Daily broadcasts air on 95.2 FM and 94.9 FM in
Bujumbura and on 104.3 FM in Kigali.
There are new VOA shortwave broadcasts
from 04:00 to 05:30 UTC and from 19:30 to 20:00 UTC on 7350 kHz, 9815 kHz, and
11905 kHz; and from 16:00 to 16:30 UTC on 13630 kHz, 15460 kHz, and 17530
kHz.
"With thousands of Burundians fleeing to neighboring Rwanda, Tanzania
and the Democratic Republic of Congo, VOA is committed to providing accurate and
reliable news to this critical region," says Ensor.
( http://www.insidevoa.com/content/voa-boosts-broadcasts-to-burundi-as-civilians-flee-political-violence/2762849.html
via Andy Sennitt on Facebook, 12 May)