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MUMBAI: BBC is
pumping up its election coverage in India. An army of reporters from BBC World
Service English, BBC Hindi, BBC Urdu, BBC Tamil, BBC Bengali, BBC Somali, BBC
Swahili, BBC World News television, Arabic TV, Persian TV and BBC.Com/news will
board a train to broadcast stories to the world - across TV, radio and online. The
multi-platform, multi-lingual initiative - India Election Train - will
cover a diverse range of news from across India during the run-up to the countrys
general election.
BBC has worked with Indian Railways to design a time table for the project and
the train will take a route from Dehli-Ahmedabad-Mumbai-Hyderabad-Bhubaneshwar-Kolkata-Patna-Allahabad-Dehli,
with the team visiting major population centres as well as contrasting provincial
towns and rural areas. Beginning
25 April (Saturday) until 13 May (Wednesday), reporters from BBCs Global
News division will travel through India by train, investigating what Indians want
from their general election and the key themes surrounding it. "We
had carried out a similar excercise in the US during the recent presidential elections
and think that Indian elections also are a very big event. This is why we are
covering approximately 6,500 kilometers of India in 18 days," BBC World Service
executive editor South Aisa region Nazes Afroz tells Indiantelevision.com. |