The station’s audience is mostly in the west of the country, a region that has remained relatively safe during the war. The studio in Lviv is 80 kilometers from the Polish border.
From the first day of the Russian offensive, Lvivska Khvylya, one of Ukraine's first radio stations set up after the fall of the USSR, replaced its entertainment programmes with a permanent special edition to inform its listeners about the ongoing conflict.
An iconic Lviv radio station has gone from light entertainment to hard news since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine began.
The station’s audience is mostly in the west of the country, a region that has remained relatively safe during the war. The studio in Lviv is 80 kilometers from the Polish border.
From the first day of the Russian offensive, Lvivska Khvylya, one of Ukraine's first radio stations set up after the fall of the USSR, replaced its entertainment programmes with a permanent special edition to inform its listeners about the ongoing conflict.