Radios

Radio Sawt El Muhajir

At the end of the seventies, a wind of freedom blew over Belgium's airwaves, as free radio stations took centre stage, challenging the mainstream radio. The eighties were synonymous with the explosion of free radio in Brussels. A battle for free airwaves raged among free (then still pirate) radio stations. By the time the first mass authorizations were issued in 1987, there were more than 50 radio stations, 7 of which broadcasted in Arabic on different frequencies, until the state imposed them to fuse in one single "Arab frequency", broadcast from the Rogier Tower (the Martini Center). Outside of the flock of free Arab Radio's, we find the “Saout Al Mouhajir (The Voic of the Migrant), composed and hosted by Maroccan militant Ahmed Oubari.It was  broadcasting from the was of Radio Air Libre, one of the main free radios opening its airwaves to those who were not heard in the mainstream media. It was a radio show that aired every sunday from 1980 until 2003, but by many considered an Arab radio station in its own right, informing the first generation of Maghrebi about local and international developments in Brussels.