More than 200 million Kiswahili speakers can now access French-language programming free of charge after TV5MONDE introduced subtitles in one of the major languages widely spoken in Africa.
From internationally acclaimed films and captivating series to insightful documentaries, children's programmes, and stand-up comedy shows, a rich world of entertainment and culture is now more accessible than ever, thanks to the development.
This is according to the management of TV5MONDE, the world's leading television network which runs the free streaming platform TV5MONDE .
As the World Kiswahili Language Day is observed on July 7, TV5MONDE is celebrating the language by expanding access to French-language entertainment for Kiswahili-speaking audiences.
According to Kim Younes, Chief Executive Officer of TV5MONDE, the initiative aims to "strengthen the discoverability of its content and reaffirm its commitment to linguistic diversity by becoming one of the few global platforms to include this major African language in its subtitling offering."
Kiswahili is one of the official languages of the African Union.
"Through this innovation, TV5MONDE is working to build bridges between French and other languages,” stated CEO Younes. "This initiative also contributes to a better representation of African languages in linguistic databases and in the digital environment, where they too often remain underrepresented in the face of English's predominance.”
Initially launched in Nairobi, Kenya, on May 11–12, the addition of Swahili alongside Lingala was announced as part of TV5MONDE’s free streaming expansion.
The project was made possible through a groundbreaking partnership between TV5MONDE and the Franco-Beninese startup BIVARIANT. The tech firm developed custom translation models trained on specifically collected data that was digitized and processed using artificial intelligence.
"This project represented a genuine challenge due to the absence of any pre-existing technical solution,” Younes noted. "TV5MONDE is strengthening the discoverability of its content in Africa and committing to linguistic diversity by extending its subtitling offer to these two official languages of the African Union.”
Currently, viewers across Africa can freely discover thousands of hours of content in their mother tongue. This includes Cinémathèque Afrique—a newly launched, free collection of restored classic African cinema from pioneering filmmakers spanning the 1950s to today, representing countries such as Ivory Coast, Senegal, Niger, the DRC, Cameroon, Burkina Faso, and Madagascar.
A few notable titles that could be mentioned or shown on screen include Bal poussière (Henri Duparc, Ivory Coast), Le Retour d'un aventurier (Moustapha Alassane, Niger), and La vie est belle (Mweze Ngangura & Benoît Lamy, Democratic Republic of the Congo/Belgium).
The new programme also features recent, African series, such as La Coach (Ivory Coast), which explores the influencer world, image, and manipulation; Monkam (Cameroon), an award-winning psychological thriller that clinched the FESPACO 2025 Jury Prize; and Une femme à Kosyam (Burkina Faso)—a political thriller about a newly elected female president fighting corruption.
The global streaming platform indicates that more than 1,000 hours of video content are already available with Kiswahili subtitles.
About TV5MONDE
TV5MONDE is the world's leading French‑language general‑entertainment television network. It operates ten channels distributed in more than 400 million households worldwide, with programming subtitled in 12 languages.
Its offerings include the TV5MONDE streaming platform, available in 200 countries and territories, FAST channels, mobile applications, and social media. TV5MONDE also offers TV5MONDE EDU, a free online platform featuring thousands of educational resources to support French language learning through audiovisual content.