Instead of upgrading the equipment and replacing the old transmitter of the Lahore station, one of the major mediumwave stations of Radio Pakistan has been shut down completely on the directions of Director General Murtaza Solangi. This mediumwave station on 630 kHz [100 kW] had been working since 1937. It played a key role in the wars of 1965 and 1971 by broadcasting patriotic national songs.
Interestingly, besides closing the chapter of Lahore Station, Mr Solangi also sealed another major news and current affairs channel of Lahore Station that was being listened on 1332 kHz [100 kW] for the last 4 years. It is pertinent to mention that 1332 kHz was established by investing almost five hundred million rupees.
An official of Radio Pakistan disclosed that the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting was keeping mum over the solo initiative. The source further says the federal ministry is authorised to establish or close any Radio Pakistan station, but it has remained silent over this solo step for various reasons.
The DG of Radio Pakistan is of the view that the closed station was too expensive to operate. Moreover, the old infrastructure was not fulfilling the modern requirements of broadcasting. For meeting modern needs, on the further directions of the DG, a new FM channel on 93 MHz has been established, but it only covers a radius of 30-40 km.
Newly appointed Lahore Station Director (SD) Sardar Ali said the station had been bearing a huge loss monthly including 1 million rupees for electricity bills besides other expenditure. He said the new FM service was receiving enormous response from the public. “The government has just changed the medium. All the programmes of the station are broadcast on FM now,” the SD commented.
Another senior official says that citing the old transmitter as an excuse is not a suitable justification for closing the whole station. He said India has established more than 100 new mediumwave radio stations along the border for propaganda purposes. “There is a need to erect new broadcasting channels along with upgrading old ones to meet present day requirements; but the government’s attitude is beyond reason.”
(Source: The News)
Andy Sennitt adds: This interesting story was very badly written, confusing kW and kHz throughout the story - fortunately I was able to piece together what the article was actually trying to say.

on Aug 20th, 2009 at 10:58
The mentioned investments for 1332 kHz were nothing less than the construction of a completely new transmission facility, cf.
http://www.waniewski.de/id372.htm
on Aug 31st, 2009 at 11:49
it is very bad news for us because weare living in jhelum and here we can not hear the our best radio station lahore. please do any effort for this