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There are celebrations all around. But it's not only Bangladesh which  is celebrating an anniversary. The BBC's Bengali service, known simply  as BBC Bangla, is also celebrating a landmark year in 2011. 
It is  perhaps fitting that Bangladesh and BBC Bangla are celebrating  landmarks at the same time. The birth of Bangladesh was one of the most  important periods in the 70-year history of the BBC's Bengali service. 
The  people of Bangladesh did not need blind, partisan support from the BBC.  In turn, the BBC, guided by its editorial values which demand  scrupulous attention to impartiality and balance, could not offer such  support either. The BBC simply broadcast news and analysis of events as  they unfolded in the then East Pakistan, without distortion and without  fear. 
The BBC brought news of the war and what was going on in  East Pakistan to its Bengali-speaking audiences as well as its listeners  worldwide through English and other languages. The BBC's adherence to  accuracy and impartiality meant that its audiences learnt of the facts.  Those broadcasts enabled the BBC to earn the trust of the people of  Bangladesh, which remains largely intact to this day. 
Although  BBC Bangla is celebrating its 70th anniversary in December, it was on  October 11, 1941, that the BBC's Bengali-language programme was  launched, with a 15-minute talk written by the author George Orwell. At  that time it was just a weekly programme. Seventy years later, BBC  Bangla broadcasts two morning and two evening programmes every day. 
These  programmes are no longer the musings of one man, no matter how  brilliant, but packed with news reports on latest important events from  around the world. There are hard-hitting interviews, radio documentaries  on a wide range of subjects, long radio and online features, and live  phone-in programmes where listeners have their say. 
BBC Bangla  today boasts a website: bbcbangla.com, which showcases the best of its  radio programmes as well additional news and feature elements. A year  ago BBC Bangla launched a news update service on mobile phones across  Bangladesh, which can be accessed on all six networks in the country by  dialling 16262.
Over the years, the BBC has developed close  transmission partnership with the state broadcaster, Bangladesh Betar,  to relay English and Bengali programmes on FM in major cities across the  country. The first was FM 100 in Dhaka in 1994, which developed into a  12-hour service with 10 hours of English output from BBC World Service,  and two hours of Bangla programming. 
Later, in 2008, the BBC  signed agreements to relay the four Bangla programmes on FM in  Chittagong, Khulna, Rajshahi, Sylhet, Rangpur and Comilla. A fair amount  of technical and other difficulties had to be overcome at these  stations, but by the end of 2011 these cities were witnessing a steady  increase in radio audiences. 
The shift from short-wave listening  to FM -- which we have observed in developed as well as many developing  countries -- is beginning to take shape in Bangladesh as well. 
At  the same time, the BBC recognised that overall radio listening was  declining gradually. In its place, television was emerging as the medium  of choice -- whether to consume news and current affairs, or  entertainment, or educational information. This recognition led to BBC  Bangla making efforts to establish its presence at the Bangladeshi  television landscape, even when radio remained its most important  platform. 
The first breakthrough happened in 2005, when BBC  Bangla was approached by the BBC's international charity arm, the BBC  World Service Trust (BBC WSTnow BBC Media Action) to collaborate on  production of eight debate programmes. BBC Bangla provided the editorial  input while WST managed the production. A partnership was forged with  local station Channel I, to film the debates and put them on air. 
The  initial eight debates were each based on a single topic such as  education, corruption, justice, governance etc. The success of what  turned out to be the first phase of Bangladesh Sanglap encouraged the  BBC to think of a slimmer, more sustainable and more topical version of  the programme to take forward. 
Between September 2006 and January  2010, BBC Bangla produced, in collaboration with Channel I, nearly 150  episodes of the programme. The coasts of Bhola and Mongla, the tea  gardens of Sylhet, the banks of the Jamuna in Sirajganj and the dried-up  Gorai in Kushtia, the hilly setting of Rangamati and the sand beaches  of Cox's Bazar were just few of those locations outside Dhaka. 
BBC  Bangla has evolved with time: expansion on FM, mobile-phone bulletins,  use of Facebook, reinforcing website and gaining a presence at the  television landscape of Bangladesh. 
The passage of time has  changed many things: the way BBC Bangla works, the technology it uses,  the market in which it operates and the listening habits of its  audiences. But one thing has not changed -- the high regard in which it  is held in Bangladesh.
(Source : The Daily Star, Dhaka, Bangladesh via www.kimandrewelliott.com) 
 
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