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Harare partially jams US-based radio station
ZimOnline
June 26, 2006

http://www.zimonline.co.za/headdetail.asp?ID=12340

HARARE - The Zimbabwe government using technology acquired from China has been able to partially jam signal from the Voice of America (VOA)'s Studio 7 radio station that broadcasts into the crisis-hit southern African country, ZimOnline has learnt.

Studio 7 is one of three radio stations operated by exiled Zimbabweans and broadcasting into the country from outside its borders after President Robert Mugabe in the last six years shut down all independent broadcasting stations.

Harare labels the private radios enemy stations bent on inciting Zimbabweans to revolt against Mugabe, in power since Zimbabwe's 1980 independence from Britain.

An official in the Ministry of State Security, who spoke on condition he was not named, said the state's spy Central Intelligence Organisation and engineers from the Ministry of Information were now working flat out to try and completely jam Studio 7 broadcasts into Zimbabwe.

"There has been marked improvement on trying to block the US propaganda (Studio 7 broadcasts) from reaching us since the beginning of this month. The team is now aiming to look for ways to completely block the signal coming via a transmitter in Botswana," said the official.

According to the official, equipment to block Studio 7 broadcasts was imported from China last year. The government has been quick to use the same equipment to jam broadcasts from another foreign-based radio station that targets Zimbabwe, the London-based SW Radio.

ZimOnline was unable to immediately confirm with Studio 7 whether its broadcasts were being interfered with. But the spokesman of the United States embassy in Harare, Timothy Smith, said the mission was aware of problems listeners were having receiving Studio 7 signal, adding that Washington had been alerted to probe the matter.

Smith said: "We have heard of the problem of the Studio 7 signal and we sent it to Washington so that we are 100 percent sure of the source of the problem. AM signals can have a number of interferences which are not specific. So the investigations will tell us what the real problem is before we speculate. By Monday (today) we should be having a definite answer."

However, ZimOnline understands that the American government is aware of the Chinese technology imported by Harare to disrupt Studio 7 broadcasts and VOA technicians are said to be in the process of working out measures to counter the jamming.

Zimbabwe's Ministry of Information refused to comment on the matter saying in the first place it did not recognise Studio 7 because the radio station was not registered in terms of the country's laws.

Studio 7 is a US government sponsored project to try and provide an alternative platform for a variety of views and opinions that are otherwise unable to get heard on Zimbabwe state-owned radio because they are perceived as contrary to the views of Mugabe and his government.

It broadcasts on AM and on shortwave but for more than a week now, listeners have been unable to receive clear signal from the station because of the jamming by Harare.

Studio 7 broadcasts in English as well as in the two main vernacular languages, Shona and Ndebele, enabling it to reach out to remoter parts of the country, inaccessible to Zimbabwe's few remaining independent newspapers.

Zimbabwe has four radio stations and one television station all owned and controlled by the government.

The southern African country, which has laws providing for the imprisonment of journalists for up to 20 years for publishing falsehoods, was last year ranked by the World Association of Newspapers as one of the three most dangerous places in the world for journalists.

The other two countries are the former Soviet Republic of Uzbekistan and the Islamic Republic of Iran. - ZimOnline

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