Public Francophone Radios

The Public Francophone Radios (French: Radios francophones publiques) is a group of French-speaking radio broadcasters comprising Radio France, Radio Canada, the Radio Télévision Suisse and RTBF.[1]

It produces programmes such as L'actualité francophone[2] (weekly news), La librairie francophone[3] (books) and others.[4]

History

The Communauté des radios publiques de langue française (CRPLF) was created in 1955 and became the Radios francophones publiques in 2002.[4]

In 2016, the Radios francophones publiques fused with the Communauté des télévisions francophones to form the Médias francophones publics.

Notes and references

  1. Membres, www.radiosfrancophones.org (page visited on 13 April 2013).
  2. L'actualité francophone Archived 2016-03-14 at the Wayback Machine, www.radiosfrancophones.org (page visited on 13 April 2013).
  3. La librairie francophone Archived 2016-01-20 at the Wayback Machine, www.radiosfrancophones.org (page visited on 13 April 2013).
  4. Mission Archived 2016-01-25 at the Wayback Machine, www.radiosfrancophones.org (page visited on 13 April 2013).
gollark: Why? It can be turned on and off electronically.
gollark: Probably, people will complain but then proceed to use them anyway.
gollark: It's far too big to collapse in the near term without someone deliberately causing it.
gollark: Except that's hard to enforce.
gollark: Oh, or pay your friends to delete their accounts.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.