Community radio licenses are being flexed as proof that the state wants rural voices loud, local, and politically useful.
Community radio as a policy signal
Community radio as a policy signal
- Broadcasting expansion got framed as inclusion in action.
- Treated local airwaves as development infrastructure.
- Pitched access over elite media dominance.
- Sold as nobody-gets-left-out politics.
- Jenfan Muswere toured Lyeja FM operations.
- Checked how the station serves nearby communities.
- Talked up language, culture, and relevance.
- Used the visit to reinforce government messaging.
- Lyeja FM operates as one of 14 licensed community stations.
- Gives sidelined groups a microphone.
- Pushes local culture preservation.
- Focuses on everyday community needs.
- Government backs broadcasting in 16 official languages.
- Links media access to development targets.
- Frames radio as social glue.
- Aligns messaging with Vision 2030 ambitions.
- State pledged training and technical upgrades.
- Aimed at sharper programming and reach.
- Focused on district-level issues.
- Positioned support as ongoing.
- Community stations carried public health messaging.
- Helped counter Covid-19 misinformation.
- Reinforced national compliance efforts.
- Credited with public education wins.
- Drug and substance abuse flagged as new threat.
- Community radio tasked with awareness pushing.
- Responsibility spread to local broadcasters.
- Framed as a shared national duty.
- Richard Moyo joined the tour.
- ZANU-PF leadership tagged along.
- Senior officials rounded out the entourage.
- Visit doubled as political visibility.