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Govt
gets a taste of own medicine
Itai
Mushekwe, The Independent (Zimbabwe)
July 06, 2007
http://allafrica.com/stories/200707060702.html
Government radio jamming
equipment reportedly purchased in China has backfired, gagging its
own new shortwave project, Voice of Zimbabwe (VOZ), sources at the
station revealed to the Zimbabwe Independent this week. The ambitious
station, set up to counter Western broadcasts, is said to be battling
to recruit qualified personnel to run its operations while its few
employees are still in Harare instead of moving to Gweru where it
was due to be housed. Sources said the equipment was believed to
be made up of three jammers installed at Thornhill, a military airbase
and government communications centre in the Midlands. The plan was
to block a perceived negative publicity campaign from outside radio
stations such as Voice of America (VOA) funded by the US State Department,
SW Radio which beams from London and Dutch-funded Voice of the People
(VOP), among others. The jamming equipment has prevented VOZ from
starting regular operations due to the self-signal interception
going on at the station.
Zimbabweans have been
forced to listen to state radio programming owing to punitive broadcasting
laws enacted by government. The country has four state-controlled
radio stations operating under the frequency modulation (FM) radio
wave band and one shortwave, VOZ, which appears to be suffering
a stillbirth. Government clamped down on Capital Radio, Zimbabwe's
first independent radio station in 2000 setting the police on the
station's offices in Harare where its equipment was confiscated.
Radio Dialogue, a community radio station housed in Bulawayo, has
also been forcibly shut down. "Ever since the station was launched
on May 25, it is yet to start regular operations," a source
said. "There are no news broadcast nor a set programming timetable.
To make things worse there are no announcers, liberation war music
occasionally plays but fades away at different times."
Government announced
two months ago that the station would run trial broadcasts for three
weeks on 5975 kHz and 4828 kHz, but the trials were a major flop
owing to the jamming machinery from China. In a bid to cover the
broadcasting setback both Zimbabwe Broadcasting Holdings (ZBH) and
Information minister Sikhanyiso Ndlovu have remained tight-lipped
on the issue and have failed to give any explanation as to why the
touted panacea to counter Western "pirate" radio stations
is failing to broadcast. VOZ boss, Happison Muchechetere who is
also a war veteran yesterday denied that the station was experiencing
technical problems. He said government had purchased state-of-the-art
equipment for the propaganda project. Muchechetere said government
is at war on the airwaves with imperialists. He said the "imperialists"
will not win. "It's a war of the airwaves and we're not afraid,"
said Muchechetere. "We know we're at war with imperialists
and they are not going to win. You people forget that you're doing
propaganda for the white man. I'm not ashamed that I'm doing propaganda
for Zimbabweans and for someone who liberated this country. Hapana
chirikujammer apa (There is no jamming here). We are not experiencing
any technical problems," he said.
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