China Radio International


China Radio International is a state-controlled international radio broadcaster of China. It is currently headquartered in Babaoshan area of Beijing's Shijingshan District. It was founded on December 3, 1941, as Radio Peking. It later adopted the pinyin form Radio Beijing.
It has 32 overseas correspondent bureaux and 6 main regional bureaux, and broadcasts over 2,700 hours of programming each day, including news, current affairs, and features on politics, the economy, culture, science and technology. Its overseas reporting involves 65 languages. More than 50 shortwave transmitters are used to cover most of the world; it is broadcast via the internet and numerous satellites; and its programs are rebroadcast by many local AM and FM radio stations worldwide.
CRI states that it "endeavours to promote favourable relations between the PRC and the world" but upholds the PRC's official policies, including on controversial issues such as the political status of Taiwan and the Dalai Lama. As with other nations' external broadcasters such as Voice of America, BBC World Service and Radio Australia, CRI claims to "play a significant role in the PRC's soft power strategy" and "going out" policy, aiming to expand the influence of Chinese culture and media in a global stage. It is trying to employ new media to compete with other international media. Unlike those broadcasters, CRI's control via indirect majority ownership or financial support of radio stations in various nations is not published.
China Radio International is today the international radio arm of the China Media Group after the first session of the 13th National People's Congress in March 2018 which created the CMG. In February 2020, the United States Department of State designed CRI and other Chinese state-owned media outlets as "foreign missions."

History

Radio was first introduced in China in the 1920s and 1930s. However, few households had radio receivers. A few cities had commercial stations. Most usage of radio was for political purpose, frequently on a local area level.
The Chinese Communist Party first used radio in Yanan Shaanxi Province in March 1940 with a transmitter imported from Moscow. Xinhua New Chinese Radio went on the air from Yanan on December 30, 1940. XNCR transmitted to a larger geographical area after 1945, and its programs became more regular and formalised with broadcasts of news, official announcements, war bulletins, and art and literary programs.
The English service started on September 11, 1947, transmitting as XNCR from a cave in Shahe in the Taihang Mountains, when China was in the midst of a civil war, to announce newly conquered areas and broadcast a Chinese political and cultural perspective to the world at large. The station moved from the Taihang Mountains to the capital, Peking, when The People's Republic of China was formed in 1949. Its name was changed to Radio Peking on April 10, 1950, and to Radio Beijing in 1983. On January 1, 1993, the name of the station was again changed, this time to China Radio International, in order to avoid any confusion with local Beijing radio broadcasting. Its online broadcasting platform: China International Broadcasting Network was formally established in 2011, as a joint venture of China Radio International, Huawen Media Investment, JinZhengYuan, Youku, Oriental Times Media and Suning Holdings Group.

Short wave/international broadcasting

CRI broadcasts via shortwave radio, satellite and the Internet in English and numerous other languages. There are also numerous AM and FM relays.

Shortwave broadcasts in English are targeted at North America, South America, the Caribbean, Europe, Africa, Asia and the South Pacific. CRI maintains direct shortwave broadcasts to developed, media-rich countries in North America and Europe, even as major Western broadcasters reduce or discontinue such broadcasts.

Programming

Mandarin Channel

At the beginning of 1984, it started to broadcast home service to the Beijing area on AM and FM frequencies. The service later expanded to dozens of major cities across the PRC, providing listeners inside the PRC with timely news and reports, music, weather, English and Chinese learning skills, as well as other services.

CRI News Radio (90.5 FM)

CRI News Radio was established on 28 September 2005, which takes advantage of CRI's journalists from all around the world and report international news, sport, entertainment and lifestyle programmes for domestic listeners in Mandarin Chinese. Its aim is to make CRI News Radio a first-class national news radio brand and its slogans are 'First News, News First', 'On-the-Spot China, Live World' etc.
CRI News Radio can be heard online and in Beijing on the radio on 90.5 FM; in Tianjin 90.6 FM; in Chongqing 91.7 FM; in Guangdong, Hong Kong, and Macau 107.1 FM; in Shandong 89.8 FM; in Anhui 90.1 FM.
Popular Shows
The following programmes can be heard on the Mandarin version of the podcast from the World Radio Network:
This broadcast was originally targeted at London in the United Kingdom. In 2006, they removed the "London" reference, which was part of the introduction as "Ni hao London. Hello London"

English Channel

CRI in English (846 AM, 1008 AM; 91.5 FM)

The CRI English channels that can be heard online are:
CRI offers a list of podcast programs in English:
During major Chinese holidays, such as Chinese New Year, May Day, and Mid-Autumn Festival, China Radio International typically broadcasts special programmes such as:
Most of these programmes are not typical of the broadcast during the other parts of the year. The analogy is similar to Christmas music broadcasts in the United States.

Olympic Radio

In July 2006, CRI launched a new radio station called CRI Olympic Radio at 900 AM in Beijing. This special broadcast was done in Mandarin, Korean, English, Russian, French, Spanish, Arabic, Japanese and German 24 hours a day. This service was terminated in late 2008 after the Beijing Olympics and now the frequency 900 AM is occupied by CRI News Radio which only covers Beijing.

Languages

China Radio International broadcasts in the following languages:
LanguageLaunchedWebsite
Albanian
Arabichttp://arabic.cri.cn
Armenian12 April 2011
Belarusian23 September 2009http://belarusian.cri.cn
Bengalihttp://bengali.cri.cn
Bulgarianhttp://bulgarian.cri.cn
Burmese10 April 1950http://myanmar.cri.cn
Croatian
Cambodian11 December 2008http://cambodian.cri.cn
Cantonese
Czechhttp://czech.cri.cn
Dutch23 September 2009
English11 September 1947http://english.cri.cn
Esperanto19 December 1964http://esperanto.cri.cn
Estonian
Filipino
French5 June 1958http://french.cri.cn
German15 April 1960
Greek23 September 2009http://greek.cri.cn
Hausahttp://hausa.cri.cn
Hebrew23 September 2009http://hebrew.cri.cn
Hindi15 March 1959http://hindi.cri.cn
Hungarianhttp://hungarian.cri.cn
Indonesianhttp://indonesian.cri.cn
Italian
Japanese3 December 1941
Kazakhhttps://web.archive.org/web/20170908052146/http://kazak.cri.cn/
Korean2 July 1950http://korean.cri.cn/
Laotian20 November 2006http://laos.cri.cn
Malaysian
Mandarin
Mongolian1 December 1964
Nepali25 Jun 1975http://nepal.cri.cn
Persianhttp://persian.cri.cn
Polish
Portuguesehttp://portuguese.cri.cn
Pashtohttp://pushtu.cri.cn
Romanian30 August 1968
Russian24 December 1954
Serbianhttp://serbian.cri.cn
SinhalaJanuary 1975http://sinhalese.cri.cn
Spanish3 September 1956http://espanol.cri.cn
Swahili6 March 2006http://swahili.cri.cn
Swedish
TamilAugust 1963
Thaihttp://thai.cri.cn
Tibetanhttps://web.archive.org/web/20190224113849/http://tibet.cri.cn/
Turkishhttp://turkish.cri.cn
UkrainianMay 2008
Urduhttp://urdu.cri.cn
Uygurhttps://web.archive.org/web/20180116173813/http://uygur.cri.cn/
Vietnamese

The Tibetan, Uygur and Kazakh services are broadcast in association with local radio stations.

Joint ventures

China International Broadcasting Network

China International Broadcasting Network of listed company Oriental Times Media for 15% stake, the operator of Youku for 10% stake and Suning Holdings Group, the parent company of PPTV for 10% stake.

Citations