In 2001, Sinduhije founded
Radio Publique Africaine (RPA), along with
Samantha Power, as a means of bringing about peace between his fellow
Tutsi and the
Hutu in his often war-torn country. He thought of the idea while working at the state radio station. RPA's stated purpose is "to humanize relations between the ethnic groups." Sinduhije later stated that it was initially hard to find donors for the project, given the regional distrust of public radio after the role that the Rwandan public radio station
Radio Télévision Libre des Mille Collines had played in
that nation's recent genocide. The incident led
Amnesty International to call on Burundian authorities to guarantee Sinduhije's safety and that of other journalists. The
government of Burundi briefly banned the station on 17 September 2003 for broadcasting an interview with a spokesman for
Agathon Rwasa's rebel group, the
National Liberation Forces. However, other stations refused to broadcast news in solidarity until the ban was removed, and the government allowed the station to resume transition within three days. For Sinduhije's work with the station, he was honored with the 2004
International Press Freedom Award of the
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ). In 2009,
Time named him to its
Time 100, an "annual list of the world's most influential people". ==Presidential candidacy==