XHFCE-FM
City | Huayacocotla, Veracruz, Mexico |
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Broadcast area | Northern Veracruz, eastern Hidalgo |
Branding | Radio Huayacocotla |
Slogan | La Voz Campesina |
Frequency | 105.5 MHz |
First air date | 15 August 1965 |
Format | Indigenous community radio |
ERP | 10,000 watts[1] |
Callsign meaning | Fomento Cultural y Educativo |
Former callsigns | XEJN-OC |
Owner | Fomento Cultural y Educativo, A.C. |
Webcast | http://radiohuaya.iberopuebla.edu.mx:8000/xhfce.m3u |
Website | http://www.fomento.org.mx/radio |
XHFCE-FM (Radio Huayacocotla: La Voz de los Campesinos – "The Voice of the Campesinos") is an indigenous community radio station based in Huayacocotla, a community of some 4000 inhabitants in the mountainous north of the Mexican state of Veracruz.
It began broadcasting, with a permit on 2390 kHz, a short wave frequency, on 15 August 1965 as XEJN-OC ("OC" for onda corta), using a 500 W transmitter. On 14 February 2005 the Secretariat of Communications and Transport (SCT) granted the station a legal broadcasting license after 27 years of negotiations, assigning it the call sign XHFCE-FM and a very high frequency (FM) slot of 105.5 MHz.
In its early years, the station's programming focused on adult literacy and numeracy efforts before evolving toward a more general community-radio format: local information, regional cultural dissemination, agricultural news, campesino rights. It carries programming in both Spanish and the local indigenous languages.
References
- ↑ Instituto Federal de Telecomunicaciones. Infraestructura de Estaciones de Radio FM. Last modified 2016-03-31. Retrieved 2015-06-25.
- ¿Quién es “La voz de los campesinos” en Sierra Norte de Veracruz?
- Entregan permiso a Radio Huayacocotla en la banda de FM
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