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International Radio and Television Organisation

The International Radio and Television Organisation (official name in French: Organisation Internationale de Radiodiffusion et de Télévision or OIRT (before 1960 International Broadcasting Organization (IBO), official name in French: Organisation Internationale de Radiodiffusion (OIR)) was an East European network of radio and television broadcasters with the primary purpose of establishing ties and securing an interchange of information between those various organizations responsible for broadcasting services, promoting the interests of broadcasting, seeking by international cooperation a solution to any matter relating to broadcasting, and studying and working out all measures having as their aim the development of broadcasting.

International Radio and Television Organisation
Organisation Internationale de Radiodiffusion et de Télévision
The OIRT logo
  Members at the date of dissolution
  Members who participated at various times before dissolution
  Associate members
Merged intoEuropean Broadcasting Union
Established28 June 1946 (1946-06-28)
Dissolved1 January 1993 (1993-01-01)
TypeUnion of broadcasting organisations
HeadquartersBrussels, Belgium (1946–1950)
Prague, Czechoslovakia (1950–1993)

History edit

Without British participation, 26 members founded the OIR on 28 June 1946. The next day, at the General Assembly of the International Broadcasting Union (IBU), an attempt was made to dissolve this body, but the motion failed to obtain the required majority. However, 18 of the 28 existing members left the IBU and become co-founders of the new OIR.[1]

In 1946, the newly created OIR installed itself in the IBU building in Brussels. Technical activity was taken up again under the authority of two directors, one delegated by the Soviet Union and the other by France. However, the political situation gradually degraded into the Cold War and this created an uneasy situation of distrust within the staff of the Technical Centre.[1]

In 1950 some members (mostly western European) left the organization to form the new European Broadcasting Union (EBU), among them Belgium, Egypt, France, Italy, Lebanon, Luxembourg, Monaco, Morocco, Netherlands, Tunisia and Yugoslavia.[1]

Broadcasting organizations from the following countries remained members: Albania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Finland (also a member of EBU), East Germany, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Syria and the Soviet Union.

As a consequence, the OIR headquarters and its Technical Centre was relocated from Brussels to Prague in 1950.[2][3] Staff members from Belgium and other Western countries, some of whom had already been active before the war, stayed on in Brussels and the centre became the technical centre of the new EBU.

Unlike the EBU, the OIRT was not limited to European and Mediterranean countries and operated as a global organization. Members of the organization included countries aligned with the Eastern bloc, such as Cuba, Vietnam, the People's Republic of China and North Korea (although the latter's membership was temporarily inactive after their break with the USSR), as well as the allies of the USSR that were temporarily led by communist parties, such as Nicaragua and the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan, and the African and Middle Eastern states having been temporarily associated or supported by the socialist camp.

On January 1, 1993, following the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War, the OIRT merged with the European Broadcasting Union and all European OIRT memberships were transferred to the EBU.[3][4]

Intervision edit

 
One of several logos used by the Intervision Network. This one comes from the Soviet Union.

The television network of OIRT was established in 1960 and was called Intervision[5] (Russian Интервидение, German Intervision, Albanian Intervizioni, Bulgarian Интервизия, Polish Interwizja, Czech Intervize, Slovak Intervízia, Hungarian Intervízió, Romanian Interviziune, Finnish Intervisio).

Between 1977 and 1980 the OIRT organised four Intervision Song Contests in Sopot, Poland, in an attempt to imitate the Eurovision Song Contest.

History of members edit

Country Organism Abbreviation Date of joining Date of exit
  Afghanistan Radio Television Afghanistan RTA 1978 1992
  Albania Radio Televizioni Shqiptar RTSH 1946 1961
  Algeria Radiodiffusion télévision algérienne RTA 1962 1970
  Belgium Institut national de radiodiffusion INR 1946 1950
Nationaal Instituut voor de Radio-omroep NIR 1946 1950
  Belarus Bielaruśkaja Tele-Radio Kampanija BTRC 1991 1992
  Bulgaria Bălgarsko Nationalno Radio BNR 1946 1992
Bălgarska Nationalna Televizija BNT 1959 1992
  China Radio Peking RP 1952 1961
Beijing Television BTV 1958 1961
  Cuba Instituto Cubano de Radio y Televisión ICRT 1962 1992
  East Germany Rundfunk der DDR DDR 1951 1990
Deutscher Fernsehfunk DFF 1952 1990
  Egypt Egyptian Radio and Television Union ERTU 1946 1950
  Estonia Eesti Raadio ER 1991 1992
Eesti Televisioon ETV 1991 1992
  Finland Yleisradio Oy Yle 1946 1992
  France Radiodiffusion française
Radiodiffusion-Télévision Française
RDF / RTF 1946 1950
  Hungary Magyar Rádió HU 1946 1992
Magyar Televízió MTV 1952 1992
  Italy RAI-Radiotelevisione Italiana RAI 1946 1950
  Latvia Latvijas Radio LR 1991 1992
Latvijas Televīzija LTV 1991 1993
  Lebanon Télé Liban TL 1946 1950
  Lithuania Lietuvos Radijas ir Televizija LRT 1991 1992
  Luxembourg Compagnie luxembourgeoise de radiodiffusion CLR 1946 1950
  Morocco Société Nationale de Radiodiffusion et de Télévision SNRT 1946 1950
  Moldova TeleRadio-Moldova TRM 1991 1992
  Monaco Radio Monte Carlo RMC 1946 1950
  Nicaragua Sistema Sandinista de Televisión SSTV 1984 1990
  Netherlands Nederlandse Radio Unie NRU 1946 1950
  North Korea Korean Central Broadcasting Committee KCBC 1953 1992
  Poland Polskie Radio PR 1946 1992
Telewizja Polska TVP 1952 1992
  Romania Societatea Română de Radiodifuziune ROR 1946 1992
Televiziunea Română TVR 1956 1992
  Russia Radio Dom Ostankino :
- Radio Mayak (MK)
- Radio Orpheus (OP)
- Voice of Russia (VOR)
RDO 1991 1992
Kanal Ostankino C1 1991 1992
RossijskoeTeleradio RTR 1991 1992
  Syria Organisme de la Radio-Télévision Arabe Syrienne ORTAS 1946 1992
  Soviet Union Vsesoyuznoye radio 1946 1991
Tsentral'noye televideniye SSSR TsT SSSR 1946 1991
  Czechoslovakia Československý rozhlas ČSR 1946 1992
Československá televise ČST 1957 1992
  Tunisia Radio Tunis RT 1946 1950
  Ukraine Natsionalna Radiokompanya Ukraïny NRU 1991 1992
Natsionalna Telekompaniya Ukraïny NTU 1991 1992
  Vietnam Voice of Vietnam VOV 1956 1992
Vietnam Television VTV 1976 1992
  South Yemen Aden Radio 1971 1990
Yemen TV 1971 1990
  Yugoslavia Jugoslovenska Radio-Televizija JRT 1946 1950

Associated members edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c (PDF). Difussion EBU. Geneva: European Broadcasting Union. 2000. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 20, 2016. Retrieved July 24, 2017.
  2. ^ Lewis, David (January 20, 2012). (PDF). Geneva: European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 12, 2012. Retrieved July 24, 2017. The EBU was founded in 1950 and initially drew its membership largely from western Europe, while a rival sister organization based in Prague, the OIRT, served the state broadcasters under Soviet domination the other side of the Iron Curtain.
  3. ^ a b Central and Eastern Europe: Audiovisual landscape and copyright legislation. Audiovisual Eureka and European Audiovisual Observatory. 1994. ISBN 978-9-0621-5459-3. Retrieved July 24, 2017.
  4. ^ (PDF). EBU Dossiers. Geneva: European Broadcasting Union. January 2004. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 29, 2005. Retrieved July 24, 2017.
  5. ^ Paulu, Burton (1967). "Programs: information". Radio and Television Broadcasting on the European Continent. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. p. 141. ISBN 9780816660469. OCLC 321366. Retrieved July 24, 2017.

External links edit

international, radio, television, organisation, intervision, network, redirects, here, other, uses, intervision, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sourc. Intervision Network redirects here For other uses see Intervision disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources International Radio and Television Organisation news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message The International Radio and Television Organisation official name in French Organisation Internationale de Radiodiffusion et de Television or OIRT before 1960 International Broadcasting Organization IBO official name in French Organisation Internationale de Radiodiffusion OIR was an East European network of radio and television broadcasters with the primary purpose of establishing ties and securing an interchange of information between those various organizations responsible for broadcasting services promoting the interests of broadcasting seeking by international cooperation a solution to any matter relating to broadcasting and studying and working out all measures having as their aim the development of broadcasting International Radio and Television OrganisationOrganisation Internationale de Radiodiffusion et de TelevisionThe OIRT logo Members at the date of dissolution Members who participated at various times before dissolution Associate membersMerged intoEuropean Broadcasting UnionEstablished28 June 1946 1946 06 28 Dissolved1 January 1993 1993 01 01 TypeUnion of broadcasting organisationsHeadquartersBrussels Belgium 1946 1950 Prague Czechoslovakia 1950 1993 Contents 1 History 2 Intervision 3 History of members 4 Associated members 5 References 6 External linksHistory editWithout British participation 26 members founded the OIR on 28 June 1946 The next day at the General Assembly of the International Broadcasting Union IBU an attempt was made to dissolve this body but the motion failed to obtain the required majority However 18 of the 28 existing members left the IBU and become co founders of the new OIR 1 In 1946 the newly created OIR installed itself in the IBU building in Brussels Technical activity was taken up again under the authority of two directors one delegated by the Soviet Union and the other by France However the political situation gradually degraded into the Cold War and this created an uneasy situation of distrust within the staff of the Technical Centre 1 In 1950 some members mostly western European left the organization to form the new European Broadcasting Union EBU among them Belgium Egypt France Italy Lebanon Luxembourg Monaco Morocco Netherlands Tunisia and Yugoslavia 1 Broadcasting organizations from the following countries remained members Albania Bulgaria Czechoslovakia Finland also a member of EBU East Germany Hungary Poland Romania Syria and the Soviet Union As a consequence the OIR headquarters and its Technical Centre was relocated from Brussels to Prague in 1950 2 3 Staff members from Belgium and other Western countries some of whom had already been active before the war stayed on in Brussels and the centre became the technical centre of the new EBU Unlike the EBU the OIRT was not limited to European and Mediterranean countries and operated as a global organization Members of the organization included countries aligned with the Eastern bloc such as Cuba Vietnam the People s Republic of China and North Korea although the latter s membership was temporarily inactive after their break with the USSR as well as the allies of the USSR that were temporarily led by communist parties such as Nicaragua and the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan and the African and Middle Eastern states having been temporarily associated or supported by the socialist camp On January 1 1993 following the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War the OIRT merged with the European Broadcasting Union and all European OIRT memberships were transferred to the EBU 3 4 Intervision edit nbsp One of several logos used by the Intervision Network This one comes from the Soviet Union The television network of OIRT was established in 1960 and was called Intervision 5 Russian Intervidenie German Intervision Albanian Intervizioni Bulgarian Interviziya Polish Interwizja Czech Intervize Slovak Intervizia Hungarian Intervizio Romanian Interviziune Finnish Intervisio Between 1977 and 1980 the OIRT organised four Intervision Song Contests in Sopot Poland in an attempt to imitate the Eurovision Song Contest History of members editCountry Organism Abbreviation Date of joining Date of exit nbsp Afghanistan Radio Television Afghanistan RTA 1978 1992 nbsp Albania Radio Televizioni Shqiptar RTSH 1946 1961 nbsp Algeria Radiodiffusion television algerienne RTA 1962 1970 nbsp Belgium Institut national de radiodiffusion INR 1946 1950Nationaal Instituut voor de Radio omroep NIR 1946 1950 nbsp Belarus Bielaruskaja Tele Radio Kampanija BTRC 1991 1992 nbsp Bulgaria Bălgarsko Nationalno Radio BNR 1946 1992Bălgarska Nationalna Televizija BNT 1959 1992 nbsp China Radio Peking RP 1952 1961Beijing Television BTV 1958 1961 nbsp Cuba Instituto Cubano de Radio y Television ICRT 1962 1992 nbsp East Germany Rundfunk der DDR DDR 1951 1990Deutscher Fernsehfunk DFF 1952 1990 nbsp Egypt Egyptian Radio and Television Union ERTU 1946 1950 nbsp Estonia Eesti Raadio ER 1991 1992Eesti Televisioon ETV 1991 1992 nbsp Finland Yleisradio Oy Yle 1946 1992 nbsp France Radiodiffusion francaiseRadiodiffusion Television Francaise RDF RTF 1946 1950 nbsp Hungary Magyar Radio HU 1946 1992Magyar Televizio MTV 1952 1992 nbsp Italy RAI Radiotelevisione Italiana RAI 1946 1950 nbsp Latvia Latvijas Radio LR 1991 1992Latvijas Televizija LTV 1991 1993 nbsp Lebanon Tele Liban TL 1946 1950 nbsp Lithuania Lietuvos Radijas ir Televizija LRT 1991 1992 nbsp Luxembourg Compagnie luxembourgeoise de radiodiffusion CLR 1946 1950 nbsp Morocco Societe Nationale de Radiodiffusion et de Television SNRT 1946 1950 nbsp Moldova TeleRadio Moldova TRM 1991 1992 nbsp Monaco Radio Monte Carlo RMC 1946 1950 nbsp Nicaragua Sistema Sandinista de Television SSTV 1984 1990 nbsp Netherlands Nederlandse Radio Unie NRU 1946 1950 nbsp North Korea Korean Central Broadcasting Committee KCBC 1953 1992 nbsp Poland Polskie Radio PR 1946 1992Telewizja Polska TVP 1952 1992 nbsp Romania Societatea Romană de Radiodifuziune ROR 1946 1992Televiziunea Romană TVR 1956 1992 nbsp Russia Radio Dom Ostankino Radio Mayak MK Radio Orpheus OP Voice of Russia VOR RDO 1991 1992Kanal Ostankino C1 1991 1992RossijskoeTeleradio RTR 1991 1992 nbsp Syria Organisme de la Radio Television Arabe Syrienne ORTAS 1946 1992 nbsp Soviet Union Vsesoyuznoye radio 1946 1991Tsentral noye televideniye SSSR TsT SSSR 1946 1991 nbsp Czechoslovakia Ceskoslovensky rozhlas CSR 1946 1992Ceskoslovenska televise CST 1957 1992 nbsp Tunisia Radio Tunis RT 1946 1950 nbsp Ukraine Natsionalna Radiokompanya Ukrainy NRU 1991 1992Natsionalna Telekompaniya Ukrainy NTU 1991 1992 nbsp Vietnam Voice of Vietnam VOV 1956 1992Vietnam Television VTV 1976 1992 nbsp South Yemen Aden Radio 1971 1990Yemen TV 1971 1990 nbsp Yugoslavia Jugoslovenska Radio Televizija JRT 1946 1950Associated members editCountry Organism Abbreviation Date of joining Date of withdraw nbsp West Germany Arbeitsgemeinschaft der offentlich rechtlichen Rundfunkanstalten der Bundesrepublik Deutschland ARD 1988 1992Zweites Deutsches Fernsehen ZDF 1988 1992 nbsp Mongolia Mongolian National Broadcaster MNB 1967 1992References edit a b c EBU 50th Anniversary PDF Difussion EBU Geneva European Broadcasting Union 2000 Archived from the original PDF on December 20 2016 Retrieved July 24 2017 Lewis David January 20 2012 The Situation of Public Broadcasting in Europe PDF Geneva European Broadcasting Union Archived from the original PDF on May 12 2012 Retrieved July 24 2017 The EBU was founded in 1950 and initially drew its membership largely from western Europe while a rival sister organization based in Prague the OIRT served the state broadcasters under Soviet domination the other side of the Iron Curtain a b Central and Eastern Europe Audiovisual landscape and copyright legislation Audiovisual Eureka and European Audiovisual Observatory 1994 ISBN 978 9 0621 5459 3 Retrieved July 24 2017 50 years of Eurovision PDF EBU Dossiers Geneva European Broadcasting Union January 2004 Archived from the original PDF on January 29 2005 Retrieved July 24 2017 Paulu Burton 1967 Programs information Radio and Television Broadcasting on the European Continent Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press p 141 ISBN 9780816660469 OCLC 321366 Retrieved July 24 2017 External links editIntertel from Transdiffusion Archived 2008 06 08 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title International Radio and Television Organisation amp oldid 1190592209 Intervision, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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