Oromia Broadcasting Network

The Oromia Broadcasting Network (OBN) is a regional public service broadcaster headquartered in Adama, Ethiopia. It is the leading media organization in the Oromia region of Ethiopia and broadcasts on Eutelsat via the Ethiosat platform.

Oromia Broadcasting Network's(OBN)
LaunchedJune 2012
NetworkTelevision network
Owned byOromia Radio and Television Organization (ORTO)
Picture format1080p (HDTV) & 576i (SDTV), 16:9)
SloganSagalee Uummataa (Afaan Oromo)
የህዝብ ድምፅ (Amharic)
Voice of the People (English)
CountryEthiopia
Formerly calledETV 2 and TVO
Websiteobn.net
Availability
Satellite
Ethiosat11512-H-27500-3/4(HD)

History

The channel is run by the Oromia Radio and Television Organization (ORTO), founded on July 12, 2006 by Proclamation number 113/2006 of the Regional Government, as Oromia mass media organization (OMMO). The organization was renamed by the regional government to Oromia Radio and TV Organization by the Proclamation No. 164/2011 in 2011.

Notably Abiy Ahmed was a board member of the organization that runs OBN before assuming the office of Prime Minister. [1]

In February 2018 the president of the Oromia regional state, Lemma Megersa, pledged to defend the independence and impartiality of the state-run Oromia Broadcasting Network (OBN), among others. He stated this after a central committee meeting in Adama by the OPDO, the Oromo faction of the ruling EPRDF party that controls the Oromia region.[2]

Programming

Content is mostly focused on news from the Oromia regional state, but also covers news from the national and international levels. The majority of broadcasts are in Afaan Oromo (the native language of the Oromo people) with some programs in Amharic (the federal language of Ethiopia) and English.

Political Significance

Many prominent Oromo leaders in the government of Ethiopia use OBN as a platform to reach the majority of the Afaan Oromo speaking population such as when leading OPDO figure Abadula Gemeda announced his displeasure with the government's mistreatment of internally displaced Oromo people in 2017.[3]

In March 2018 OBN was the first to confirm a deadly incident in the border town of Moyale via an interview with the town's mayor.[4]

References

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