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IPI
Names SW Radio Africa "Free Media Pioneer 2005"
The International
Press Institute (IPI)
April 23, 2005
The International
Press Institute (IPI) has announced its decision to honour SW Radio
Africa with its 2005 Free Media Pioneer Award. Gerry Jackson, founder
and station manager of SW Radio Africa, will receive the prize at
an award ceremony on 24 May, during the forthcoming IPI World Congress
in Nairobi, Kenya (21-24 May).
In Zimbabwe,
where President Robert Mugabe's autocratic regime controls both
radio and television, and the only independent daily newspaper,
the Daily News, has been shut down, the shortwave radio station
SW Radio Africa remains a rare independent voice.
Launched in
December 2001, SW Radio Africa broadcasts not from Zimbabwe, but
from a studio in northwest London and is run by a group of exiled
reporters and DJs. The station's founder, Gerry Jackson, a veteran
of 25 years broadcasting experience in Africa, was fired from the
Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC) music station, Radio 3,
for "insubordination" after airing live telephone calls from people
on the scene during food riots in Harare in 1997.
In 2000, Jackson
fought and won a legal battle in the Zimbabwean Supreme Court to
set up the country's first independent radio station, Capital FM.
After only six days, it was raided by armed police officers, who
confiscated broadcasting equipment, and used a presidential decree
to shut down the station.
Jackson went
into hiding and - with presidential elections set for March 2002
- decided to broadcast from outside Zimbabwe, setting up a new radio
station in London, where half a million Zimbabwean exiles live.
Featuring a successful mix of music, news and interviews, SW Radio
Africa's main aim is to give a "voice to the voiceless" by fostering
a dialogue with its Zimbabwean audience, who call in - often at
great risk - to air their opinions and give first-hand accounts
of the deteriorating situation in the country.
In the run-up
to the March 2005 parliamentary elections, the government of Zimbabwe
mounted a concerted campaign to prevent SW Radio Africa from being
heard in the country, jamming their signals on several frequencies.
The government campaign against the station continued unabated after
the elections, which were widely condemned as fraudulent, with continued
deliberate jamming of its broadcasts and plans to launch a new 24-hour
shortwave radio station to counter SW Radio Africa's "negative propaganda."
The annual Free
Media Pioneer Award was established by IPI, the global network of
editors, media executives and leading journalists, in 1996 to honour
individuals or organisations that have fought against great odds
to ensure freer and more independent media in their country or region.
The Award is co-sponsored by the U.S.-based Freedom Forum, a non-partisan,
international foundation dedicated to free press and free speech.
Previous winners
of the Free
Media Pioneer Award are CASCFEN - Central Asia and Southern
Caucasian Freedom of Expression Network (2004); the Media Council
of Tanzania (2003); the independent daily newspaper Danas, Serbia
(2002); the independent on-line newspaper Malaysiakini.com (2001);
IPYS - Press and Society Institute, Peru (2000); EFJA - Ethiopian
Free Press Journalists' Association (1999); Radio B-92, Yugoslavia
(1998); AJI - Alliance of Independent Journalists, Indonesia (1997);
and NTV, Russia (1996).
For more information
about the IPI Free Media Pioneer Award, as well as the IPI World
Congress (hotel booking deadlines have been extended until 1 May),
please visit the IPI Websites: www.freemedia.at
and www.ipikenya.com
or telephone IPI at: + 43 1 - 512 90 11
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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