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Jamming
of radio stations extended to VOA
Reporters
sans frontières / Reporters Without Borders (RSF)
July 06, 2006
http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=18218
The sabotaging of broadcasts
by radio stations based abroad is continuing in Zimbabwe, Reporters
Without Borders said today after learning that programmes of the
US government radio station Voice of America (VOA) have become the
latest target of the jamming carried out by the Harare government
with Chinese complicity.
"This new case of
jamming shows how the Zimbabwean government despises its own people,
blocking their ears to the news outlets it dislikes," the press
freedom organisation said. "It would be useful if United Nations
mediator Benjamin M'Kapa, the former president of Tanzania, would
demand an end to this perverse campaign. The UN and the African
Union should realise that Chinese penetration of African markets
brings more sophisticated means of repression and censorship in
its wake."
The broadcasts
of Studio 7, a VOA programme targeted at Zimbabwe, have been jammed
since mid-June by the same shrill noise that have been blotting
out the short wave broadcasts of the privately-owned, London-based
SW Radio Africa since February 2005 and the broadcasts of the Amsterdam-based
Voice of the People since September 2005. Reporters Without Borders
has obtained a recording of the SW Radio Africa jamming and has
posted it on its site (http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=18218).
VOA director David S.
Jackson said: "There has been some jamming of our broadcasts
of Studio 7, but so far the interference appears to be limited to
medium wave broadcasts to Harare, so many of our loyal listeners
throughout Zimbabwe have been able to hear our shows on short wave
and in other locations of the country without any problem."
Jackson added: "We take any interference seriously, however,
and we will continue to monitor the situation."
Produced by Zimbabwean
journalists who have gone into exile, Studio 7 aims to be an alternative
source of news for the people of Zimbabwe, where there are no privately-owned
radio or TV stations. Broadcast Monday to Friday from 7 to 8:30
p.m. (1700 to 1830 GMT), it is divided into three 30-minute segments
in English and the two leading local languages, Shona and Ndebele.
Speaking on condition
of anonymity, an official with Zimbabwe's Central Intelligence Organisation
(CIO) told the South Africa-based news site Zim Online on 26 June:
"There has been marked improvement on trying to block the US
propaganda 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."
SW Radio Africa's morning
medium wave broadcasts have been jammed since 26 June, the station's
director, Gerry Jackson, said. "The jamming appears to be quite
localised and focused on Harare," she said. "We can still
be heard in other parts of the country. This seems to follow the
same pattern and began at the same time as the jamming of VOA's
Studio 7 broadcasts on medium wave in the evening."
Jamming of SW Radio Africa's
short wave broadcasts began in February 2005, a few weeks before
controversial legislative elections. Zimbabwean presidential spokesman
George Charamba publicly hailed the interference on 29 March while
refusing to acknowledge that the government was responsible. "If
the Zimbabwe government is jamming SW Radio Africa, kudos to them,"
he said. "If they are not and do not have the equipment (to
jam), then it is time they look for that equipment."
The broadcasts of the
privately-owned Voice of the People (VOP) from a Madagascar-based
relay station belonging to the Dutch public radio corporation began
being jammed in September 2005 by the same noise as SW Radio Africa,
making its programmes inaudible.
VOP was created in June
2000 by former employees of the state-owned Zimbabwe Broadcasting
Corporation (ZBC) with help from the Soros foundation and a Dutch
NGO, the Hivos foundation. The police raided its studio in Harare
on 4 July 2002 and took away equipment. It was subsequently the
target of a bombing on 29 August 2002 which wrecked the entire studio.
It was nonetheless able to resume broadcasting.
All of its staff in Zimbabwe
was detained for several days in December 2005 and charged with
practising journalism without permission from the government-controlled
Media and Information Commission. They were supposed to be tried
last month, but the trial was postponed. The VOP management and
staff face up to five years in prison.
According to sources
in Zimbabwe, the jamming of Zimbabwean exile radio stations began
after a group of Chinese technicians arrived in Harare in January
2005 under a trade accord between China and Zimbabwe. Housed at
the Sheraton Hotel for three months, they reportedly carried out
a number of installations including a radio jamming system using
a ZBC transmitter in Gweru, in the centre of the country, and the
ZBC Pockets Hill broadcasting centre in Highlands, a suburb of Harare.
These illegal
practices, which violate international regulations governing telecommunications,
are one of the specialities of the Chinese government. Jamming is
standard practice in China, especially the jamming of Tibetan radio
stations and foreign radio stations beaming programmes to the west
of the country. A Reporters Without Borders release described this
policy as the "Great Wall of the airwaves."
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