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Come stroll along our photo gallery about African local radio

Take advantage of the May weather to stroll along UNESCO鈥檚 Headquarters building in Paris 7th arrondissment and learn all about local radio and its strengths!
This May, join UNESCO in celebrating radio through authentic photographs featuring local stations and their service to communities in Sub-Saharan Africa.
Accessible 24h/24 between 4 and 30 May 2018 along the outside fence lines of the UNESCO building in Paris, the gallery seizes in vivid shots the significance of radio for hard-to-reach populations through the representative moments from the 鈥溾 project. The gallery are also be available online for those not able to view the photos in Paris .
The pictures highlight the prominence of local radio in people鈥檚 lives with a series of portraits of correspondents, testimonies of local radio journalists and touching sceneries of everyday lives rhythmed by radio.
鈥淲e wanted to use the photos of our project to bring attention to how even the most humble radio station can seek and impart information and foster democratic participation at local level,鈥 says Mirta Louren莽o, Chief of Media Development Section at UNESCO.
The 鈥淓mpowering Local Radio with ICTs鈥 project is concluding at the end of June 2018 and this gallery serves as a transient memorial of its achievements and impact. For seven years, UNESCO is proud to have partnered with Sweden in this initiative to build the capacities of local radio and foster people鈥檚 presence on airwaves by increasing information on topics of local concern.
Since 2012, the project has been reinforcing the ICT skills and knowledge of local radio stations in 10 countries, all featured in the exposition, with the aim to provide populations, particularly isolated, rural and impoverished areas with a quality and reliable access to information on local issues affecting their lives.
Local radio stations are able to create awareness, interact with people through mobiles and calls-in, as well as diversify information sources and community representation. This quality access to information on topics of concern to their listeners additionally allows populations to discuss and make informed decisions about their lives.
The exposition depicts work of local correspondents and the companion radio can come to represent, especially when it constitutes the only information source available. 鈥淭hese photos show otherwise unknown stories and stories from difficult-to-access places, which radio succeeds in reaching out to,鈥 concludes Mirta Louren莽o.
For more information about the 鈥淓mpowering Local Radio with ICTs鈥, visit our .
To discover how local radio can promote gender equality, visit the of our exhibition 鈥淥n Air with Rural Women鈥 or come see it live at the 2018 in Brussels.