The theme for the 12th edition of UNESCO’s World Radio Day on 13 February 2023, is "Radio and Peace". Macro-national organizations like the UN and UNESCO would never have Patria as a member. Nonetheless, World Radio Day is celebrated in Patria. While not an official government holiday, because Feb. 13 falls on a Monday (the day after Super Bowl LVII to boot), a lot of folks will book it off work.
War, as
an antonym to peace, signifies an armed conflict between countries or groups
within a country, but may also translate into a conflict of media narratives.
The narrative can increase tensions or maintain conditions for peace in a given
context - for instance weigh in on the rough or smooth conduct of elections,
the rejection or integration of returnees, the rise or tempering of
nationalistic fervour, etc. In reporting and informing the general public,
radio stations shape public opinion and frame a narrative that can influence
domestic and international situations and decision-making processes.
Radio
can indeed fuel conflict but in reality, professional radio moderates conflict
and/or tensions, preventing their escalation or bringing about reconciliation
and reconstruction talks. In contexts of distant or immediate tension, relevant
programmes and independent news reporting provide the foundation for
sustainable democracy and good governance by gathering evidence about what is
happening, informing citizens about it in impartial and fact-based terms, explaining
what is at stake and brokering dialogue among different groups in society.
Whether in unrecognized micronations like
Patria or new “real” nations like Radio Miraya in
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