Radio and Television of Bosnia and Herzegovina

"BHRT" redirects here. BHRT may also refer to bioidentical hormone replacement therapy.
Radio and Television of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Bosanskohercegovačka radiotelevizija
Type Broadcast radio, television and online
Country Bosnia and Herzegovina
First air date

10 April 1945 (radio)

1 June 1961 (television)
Slogan

„Dobar vjetar u leđa“

(Good wind at your back)
Revenue 315.400 BAM (2011)[1]
Broadcast area

Bosnia and Herzegovina

Worldwide via IPTV platforms (Bosna TV)
Owner Government of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Key people

Belmin Karamehmedović
(General-Director)[2]
Marijo Pejić
(head of BHT 1)
Milan Trivić
(head of BH Radio 1)
Admir Đulančić

(head of MP BHRT)
Former names

RTV Sarajevo (1961–1992)
RTV BiH (1992–1996)
BHT (1996–2000)

PBS BiH (2000-2004)
Radio station
BH radio 1
Callsigns BHRT
Former callsigns
"tvBiH", "BHT", "PBSBiH"
Yugoslav Radio Television (JRT)
Official website
bhrt.ba

The Radio and Television of Bosnia-Herzegovina (Bosnian, Croatian and Serbian: Radiotelevizija Bosne i Hercegovine or BHRT for short / Радиотелевизија Босне и Херцеговине) formerly known as PBSBiH (Public Broadcasting Service of Bosnia and Herzegovina) is an umbrella broadcasting organization and the only member of the European Broadcasting Union from Bosnia and Herzegovina.

It was known as RTVBiH (Radio-Televizija Bosne i Hercegovine) from 1992 until 1998, when it was restructured into the current service. On 1 January 1993, RTVBiH was admitted as an active member of the European Broadcasting Union. The membership was transferred to the new parental broadcasting organisation PBSBiH in 2000.

RTVBiH (and consequently BHRT) grew out of RTV Sarajevo in 1992, one of eight principal broadcasting centers of former Yugoslavia, others being RTV Ljubljana, RTV Zagreb, RTV Beograd, RTV Novi Sad, RTV Titograd, RTV Pristina, and RTV Skopje.

BHRT currently consists of three organizational units:

There is a public corporation in the establishment which should be consisted of all public broadcasters in Bosnia and Herzegovina:

In June 2016, BHRT announced it will be suspending broadcasting at the end of June, as a consequance of insufficient funding.[3] The European Broadcasting Union (EBU) expressed strong concern as this would have been the first time a public service broadcaster in Europe would have to interrupt its broadcasting because of financial difficulties.[4]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/12/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.