BBC launches emergency lifeline radio programme for Iran

BBC launches emergency lifeline radio programme for Iran

BBC launches emergency lifeline radio programme for Iran

BBC World Service has launched a temporary emergency lifeline radio programme for Iran in response to the ongoing turmoil in the country, and the unprecedented crackdown on protests.  

To complement the existing BBC News Persian video and digital services, the radio programme will be available on mediumwave and shortwave across Iran to increase the population’s access to news and information. To broaden its offer and availability of programming, the BBC World Service has also made some of its TV content available on mediumwave radio. 

Since 8 January, the Iranian people have been subject to an internet blackout. Prior to this, BBC News Persian’s digital services saw their biggest reach in a year with their platforms reaching more than 33 million people. 

The short-term programme will cover the latest news and developments in Iran and will place events inside the country within their wider regional and international context. It will feature voices from inside Iran alongside clear, informed analysis of the most recent political, social, and economic developments shaping the situation in the country.

The programme will air daily for 30 minutes across medium and shortwave frequencies from 16:30 GMT / 20:00 Iran Standard Time. The temporary programme has been granted resource from existing funds until the end of March 2026. 

Fiona Crack, Interim Global Director, BBC News, says: “A key role of the BBC World Service is to step up in times of crisis to provide news and information for our audiences in greatest need. BBC News Persian reaches one in four adults in Iran, which is an astonishing feat considering their reporting is banned in the country. 

“The team have been essential in telling the urgent story of the Iranian people to audiences around the world, and our new radio programme will give the Iranian people more ways to access independent and impartial news.”

Tarik Kafala, Interim Regional Director, Middle East and North Africa, says: “BBC News Persian have worked tirelessly to deliver journalism throughout this period of unrest as the demand for trusted news has soared in Iran. The teams have supplied extended TV hours in Iran and an increased offer on digital platforms for the Iranian people. They have reported for UK audiences across bulletins, live pages and on forensic journalism with BBC Verify.” 

The BBC World Service has a history of launching emergency services in times of crisis. In April 2025, BBC News Burmese started providing audio and video content on a satellite channel in the aftermath of Myanmar earthquake. 

In April 2024, following the fall of the Assad regime, the BBC World Service set up an enhanced audio channel on FM and mediumwave for the people of Syria. This follows the emergency radio service for Gaza in November 2024 and for Sudan in May 2023 amid conflict.  

 In February 2022, the BBC News Ukraine service extended TV bulletins following the invasion of the country.

Where to find the programme – 

The live programme will be available at 16:30 GMT (20:00 Iran Time) on 702kHz medium wave and 9465kHz short wave

The programme will be repeated at 18:00 GMT (21:30 Iran time) on 702kHz mediumwave and 5395kHz shortwave

A visualised version of the programme will be broadcast on BBC Persian TV at 18:00 GMT (21:30 Iran time)

 

BritAsia TV launches on Freeview UK via Channelbox

BritAsia TV launches on Freeview UK via Channelbox

BritAsia TV launches on Freeview UK via Channelbox

BritAsia TV, the home of British Asian culture, has launched on the streaming TV service Channelbox, available on Freeview channel 271.

BritAsia TV is a prominent British media network dedicated to promoting British Asian culture, music, entertainment, lifestyle and community programming. The channel provides a leading platform for British Asian artists, musicians, actors and content creators to showcase their talents to a wide audience. Since its inception, BritAsia TV has become known for its diverse lineup of music videos, talk shows, documentaries, news, live events and cultural programming. 

Channelbox is a free-to-air, multi-channel OTT platform available on connected Freeview channel 271 and through Channelbox-enabled television sets connected to both an aerial and the internet. The platform offers a unique interface that delivers each channel as the equivalent of a dedicated Freeview service and supports FAST channel monetisation across more than 70 channels, bringing a broad range of content to UK audiences.

BritAsia TV’s programming spans the latest South Asian and UK music trends, exclusive interviews with rising talent and established stars, news, cultural events, and community features. The channel’s digital presence includes strong engagement through its website and social media, where it maintains a large and active audience. 

Tanya Kronfli, Head of Business Development at Channelbox, commented:
“Channelbox is committed to celebrating diversity in genre, culture and language. We are delighted to welcome BritAsia TV, the home of British Asian culture, to our platform. Their vibrant mix of music, entertainment and community programming enhances our Freeview offering and strengthens our connection with multicultural audiences across the UK.”

BritAsia TV on Channelbox via Freeview UK is now available for viewers across the country to enjoy.

ABC signs MoUs in Malaysia, Mongolia and Timor-Leste

ABC signs MoUs in Malaysia, Mongolia and Timor-Leste

ABC signs MoUs in Malaysia, Mongolia and Timor-Leste

ABC International has continued to strengthen its regional partnerships in 2026, signing Memorandums of Understanding (MoU) with broadcasters and media organisations in Malaysia, Mongolia and Timor-Leste.

Under the successful program which began in 2022, ABC International has signed 23 similar agreements with leading media organisations in Asia and the Pacific which focus on opportunities to share content, exchange expertise and knowledge, and undertake technical training and media development initiatives.

In the latest round of agreements, ABC International formalised tailored agreements with Timor-Leste’s public service news agency Tatoli, Mongolian National Broadcaster (MNB) and Malaysian state broadcaster Sarawak Media Group (SMG).

The MoUs with MNB and SMG facilitate opportunities for content sharing of news and current affairs, factual, sports and lifestyle programming, in addition to the exchange of technical advice and information, while the Tatoli agreement also includes provisions for ongoing collaboration with ABC International’s media development arm, ABC International Development, which has worked closely with Tatoli in recent years in launching an English-language news service and other capacity building initiatives.

ABC International Head Claire M. Gorman said, “ABC International has worked tirelessly over the past four years to fortify our relationships with like-minded, regional partners and formalise tailored agreements with them. Each MoU establishes a framework for collaboration across areas such as content and information sharing, and media capacity building, and in doing so, brings new opportunities for meaningful engagement.

“We are proud to announce these latest agreements with Tatoli, MNB and SMG, and look forward to the emerging possibilities for closer collaboration and how we can best work together to support and serve our respective audiences through these partnerships.”

The ABC has also recently renewed its partnership with Canadian national broadcaster CBC/Radio-Canada, signing an updated MoU to support content and distribution-related initiatives, including the development of a new children’s co-production It’s Andrew! set to premiere in Australia in 2026.

France Médias Monde achieved record-breaking 2025 across digital platforms

France Médias Monde achieved record-breaking 2025 across digital platforms

France Médias Monde achieved record-breaking 2025 across digital platforms

​In 2025, France Médias Monde achieved new all-time highs across its digital platforms, recording nearly 5 billion video views and launches (+27% vs. 2024) and 480 million visits across its websites and mobile applications. As a result, 94 million people (up from 75 million in 2024) were in weekly contact with the Group’s media outlets via digital platforms.

On social media, France Médias Monde’s channels now bring together more than 127 million followers (YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, WhatsApp, and X), with robust growth on Instagram (+110%) and a sharp rise on TikTok, where the community has quadrupled in one year.

In an unstable international context marked by the growing spread of manipulated information, these results reflect audiences’ trust in the professional and independent journalism produced by RFI, France 24, Monte Carlo Doualiya, as well as by the Group’s ‘pure-player’ digital outlets InfoMigrants, ENTR, and ZOA.

Video in high demand

France 24 recorded last year 2.6 billion video launches (+12%), confirming its position as the leading French media outlet on YouTube, with nearly 110 million monthly views and a community of over 18 million subscribers across four languages (English, French, Arabic, and Spanish).

RFI established a new video record with more than 1.8 billion views (+66%), including over 500 million views in African languages (a threefold increase in one year).

MCD recorded more than 253 million video views.

Pure-player digital outlets find their audiences

France Médias Monde’s three 100% digital offerings generated more than 330 million video launches in 2025: ENTR, developed with Deutsche Welle; InfoMigrants, developed with Deutsche Welle and ANSA; and ZOAthe digital media outlet launched last October by young Africans for young Africans, which gathered over 22 million views in just three months and has already built a community of 400,000 followers across its distribution platforms.

These performances confirm the success of France Médias Monde’s global digital strategy. Based on a reasoned hyper-distribution approach, the Group’s digital framework aims to develop offerings tailored to all uses and platforms, as well as the strong global appetite for French international media outlets.

NoireTV Launches on Channelbox

NoireTV Launches on Channelbox

NoireTV Launches on Channelbox

UK audiences gain free access to NoireTV’s premium entertainment, music, and urban storytelling via Freeview channel 271

NoireTV, the global premium cable and streaming network dedicated to African-American entertainment, global politics, Hip-Hop/Afrobeats/Dancehall music, reality series, and Global Black cinema, has officially launched on Channelbox via Freeview channel 271. The channel is now available to millions of Freeview users across the United Kingdom.

Channelbox is a multi-channel platform available on connected Freeview channel 271 and through Channelbox mobile applications worldwide. Channelbox is free-to-air and hosts more than 70 international TV channels.

NoireTV is recognised for delivering authentic stories and sounds from the U.S., Africa, the Caribbean, and the global Black diaspora. As a premium African-American cable TV and streaming network, its content lineup spans music, politics, lifestyle, unscripted series, and films—bringing forward bold narratives and vibrant cultural expression from across the world.

“We are delighted to welcome NoireTV to the Channelbox platform,” said Tanya Kronfli, Channelbox Head of Content and Business Development. “NoireTV brings a vibrant mix of entertainment, music, and global Black culture, offering UK viewers a unique opportunity to discover authentic voices and perspectives from across the diaspora.”

“NoireTV was built to amplify the voices and creativity of the global Black diaspora. We’re proud to bring our culture, our stories, and our brilliance to FAST audiences around the world in a fresh, modern way. This launch is only the beginning,” said the NoireTV CEO . 

BBC asks UN to condemn Iran allegations

BBC asks UN to condemn Iran allegations

BBC asks UN to condemn Iran allegations

In a formal filing to the United Nations over the targeting of BBC News Persian staff and their families, the BBC World Service has expressed deep concern over Iran’s new and extreme language used in relation to BBC News Persian. It has urged the UN experts to condemn Iran’s conduct towards the BBC and Iran’s attempts to frame independent journalism as a form of “terrorism” and “warfare”.

In September 2025, Iran responded to the UN urgent appeal filed in June by the BBC World Service where the BBC raised concern with the escalation of harassment, targeting and threats towards the BBC News Persian staff – and their families in Iran – in the wake of the service’s reporting on the Iran-Israel conflict. The BBC also had urged the UN to take action after the publication of the report by the Intelligence and Security Committee of the UK Parliament in July this year about Iran’s transnational repression. The “Iran” report confirmed that in the previous 12-18 months there was an escalation of physical threats and consistent targeting of the UK-based Persian-language media organisations, whom Iran perceives as “deeply undermining of the Iranian regime”; that BBC News Persian was a “prominent target” of transnational repression from Iran; and that there was a “high risk of physical attacks” in the UK.

In its response to the UN, Iran justified its ongoing, unlawful actions towards BBC journalists. Using extreme language regarding the BBC for the first time in an official filing with the UN, Iran accused BBC News Persian in “media warfare”, “trying to target the security of the country by influencing the beliefs, culture, politics and behaviour of society”. Making unfounded allegations against BBC News Persian and its reporting, Iran called on the UN rapporteurs to “evaluate” the work of Western media such as the BBC as “media terrorism”. Iran’s response also marks the first time its government has officially acknowledged that legal action has been taken against BBC News Persian staff in Iran. Before this admission, attempts to obtain information on this from the judiciary in Iran have failed.

Tarik Kafala, Middle East and North Africa Regional Director, BBC World Service, said: “The extreme, highly alarming language the Islamic Republic of Iran has used in an official government filings with the UN demonstrates the Iranian authorities’ attitude towards independent journalism and our reporting of the country. We are deeply concerned that, instead of putting an end to the harassment and threats to our staff and their families in Iran, with this language Iran signals new forms of targeting them, now justifying their persecution with counter-terrorism and national security laws. We condemn these actions.”

Laura Davison, NUJ general secretary, added: “The UN must condemn the escalating intimidation and persecution of media workers by the Iranian state. Journalists at BBC Persian are paying a huge personal price simply for doing their job. It takes enormous courage and the deepest sense of duty for a journalist to continue pursuing the truth in the face of relentless state repression. The NUJ stands in solidarity with journalists under threat and demands an end to the Iranian state’s campaign against press freedom and journalists’ rights.”

Counsel for the BBC World Service has today filed with the UN a submission, expressing alarm over the extreme language used by the Islamic Republic of Iran in relation to the BBC’s reporting and over Iran’s attempt to justify the ongoing unlawful actions towards BBC staff and their families. The submission urges the UN experts to condemn Iran’s conduct towards the BBC and Iran’s attempts to frame independent journalism as a form of terrorism and warfare. The BBC calls on the UN experts to request further information from Iran about the legal action against the BBC. It urges them to directly raise concern with Iran about efforts to characterise BBC journalism as “media terrorism” or “soft war” and about abusing national security and counter-terrorism laws to target and harass journalists and their families.

The BBC World Service has engaged with the UN over the protection of its Iranian journalists and their families since 2017, after Iran launched a national security criminal investigation into 152 BBC staff and former staff, along with an asset freeze against all of their assets in Iran, including those owned jointly with family members. Since then, a number of BBC News Persian journalists have been convicted in absentia in Iran for their reporting.

BBC News Persian is part of the BBC World Service.