[4] Radio Dabanga has been broadcasting its TV satellite channel on Eutelsat since 18 February 2018[5] on frequency 11354 GHz.
Arabic news is often translated and reworked to suit an international audience on the English language part of the website and social media platforms.
Since then the station increasingly shifted to being a reliable source of information for people in all parts of Sudan, covering a wide range of events and issues.
The editor-in-chief is Kamal Elsadig, overseeing a small group of reporters who work at the central desk in The Netherlands.
Audience participation is a significant source of information, as listeners call the radio studios with their own stories and tips.
Increasingly, the editors use WhatsApp as a tool to receive, verify and publish news from interested individuals and specialist groups such as medics and civil servants in Sudan.
While Radio Dabanga has a large audience in Sudan, the organization has been criticized by the Sudanese government in the past.
The station has survived a number of government efforts to take TV Satellite and shortwave radio broadcasts off-air, including attempts at jamming and prosecution of reporters.
After being taken down by the company in 2015 due to requests by the Sudanese government, Radio Dabanga began broadcasting with Nilesat instead.
At the time, Arabsat stated that "Radio Dabanga is considered an enemy of the Sudanese government, it's not about a few controversial news items but about the whole station.