Radio Qarwaliat

Radio Qarwaliat (Baratawla: Radiouśko Gārwālyānāgar; Khaba: Radioko Qarwalyat) was the main radio network of the Kingdom of Ucia founded on January 20, 1931. It was the oldest radio station in Ucia and the sole to broadcast overseas, with broadcasts in 43 different languages. Initially privately owned, Radio Qarwaliat was acquired by the royal government in 1946, shortly after the. Its main radio station was broadcast from Qarwaliat, the capital of Ucia and where it got its name from.

Its first station commenced transmissions in 1931, but only as an experimental project by Bahodan UjiShin, the founder of the privately owned The Ucian Chronicle newspaper. Regular programming began in 1935, with its expansion in other major Ucian cities the following years. At the time only airing news and music programming, it later began dedicating itself to educational programming to increase the literacy rate in the country. Radio Qarwaliat was famous, especially in the 1950s and 1960s, for its music, entertainment, news, educational, and other diversified content which introduced outsiders to Ucian culture. It also helped with the establishment of Ucian Television Network in 1960 and the popularization of contemporary fashion, such as miniskirts and bikinis for women and turtlenecks, flared trousers, and patterned shirts for men during the mid and late 1960s through magazine promotions and music. Radio Qarwaliat helped with the economic boom in the 1960s, although its economy still fluctuated often.

Radio Qarwaliat grew to be the largest Nesionytan radio network by 1970, almost being the equivalent of the likes of and  there. Considered a liberal and free network and a reliable source of information, it was occasionally used to spew government propaganda, but instances like this were extremely rare back then. It was eventually closed down right after the Ucian Revolution in April 1973 and replaced with the PVUA.