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Gerry Jackson: The radio heroine defying Mugabe's heavies
Kim Thomas, The Independent (UK)
July 21, 2008
View this story
on The Independent website
Barely a day
goes by without more bad news from Zimbabwe, whether it's the rigged
presidential election, the murder and torture of the regime's political
opponents, or the rampant inflation that has reached 2.2 million
per cent.
But for people
living in Zimbabwe, news is hard to come by. Broadcasters are controlled
by the state, most independent newspapers have been banned and foreign
reporters are outlawed. Impartial information about what is going
on in their own country is a rare and precious commodity.
For many Zimbabweans,
one small radio station, broadcasting on shortwave from the UK,
offers the only opportunity to find out what is happening. SW Radio
Africa has been broadcasting daily to the country since 2001, and
continues to do so despite funding problems and attempts by the
Zimbabwean government to block the signal.
The station
was founded by Gerry Jackson, a Zimbabwean journalist who used to
present a music programme for the state-run Zimbabwe Broadcasting
Corporation (ZBC) in Harare. During the food riots of 1997, Jackson
took phone calls from concerned listeners. "People were phoning
the studio all the time asking for information, because they were
hearing that cars were being stoned. They were very worried and
they didn't know where to travel. So I just started allowing people
to say what areas to avoid, which I think in a normal country would
be the accepted way of dealing with a riot situation."
Zimbabwe is
not a normal country, however. After a warning to stop taking the
calls, which she ignored, she was marched out of the studio by the
station manager, and received her formal notice a few days later.
Jackson hatched a plan to set up her own radio station, but she
had to go to court to do so. In 2000, she won her case in the Supreme
Court and, on the advice of her lawyers, acted very quickly to start
broadcasting.
Within days,
she had hired two members of staff, imported a transmitter from
South Africa and started broadcasting a test signal. But before
the station was even up and running, it was closed down. Jackson
found out when she took a phone call from her neighbour asking whether
she was aware that there were armed men in her garden.
Paramilitaries
had also surrounded the studio and - again on the advice of
her lawyers - she went into hiding.
"I was outraged - this was absurd. This was a real radio
station. This was not propaganda. This was not anti-anything -
this was real radio that was being attempted. I was very, very angry."
But she was
not deterred. Determined to set up a radio station for Zimbabweans,
Jackson came to the UK and launched SW Radio Africa with a staff
of eight in December 2001. The process of setting up the station
was fraught with problems.
"Everything
to do with this project has been unbelievably difficult and continues
to be unbelievably difficult," she says. Money was hard to
come by; the station has had to rely on funding from NGOs that support
independent media, such as the Open Society Institute. While the
station began by broadcasting three hours a day, a lack of cash
means it is now on air only two.
But radio remains
the best medium for communicating with people in Zimbabwe. People
who don't have a television or a personal computer will generally
either own a radio or have access to one - wind-up and solar-powered
devices are popular. Shortwave is a powerful tool against dictators
and despots - a signal can travel thousands of miles, so broadcasts
can be transmitted into Zimbabwe from anywhere in the world.
Each day, SW
Radio Africa broadcasts news from north London to Zimbabweans about
the events in their country. Much of it comes from people on the
ground, who talk to the station on their mobile phones or send text
messages.
The station's
seven journalists are on the phone to Zimbabwe all day, says Jackson,
often experiencing difficulty in getting through.
The job is extremely
difficult. "You're dealing with incredible violence,"
says Jackson. "It's a very depressing story to cover on a daily
basis. These are not people you don't know - these are friends
and acquaintances being killed."
Last year, Jackson
had to report on the murder of a former ZBC colleague, the cameraman
Ed Chikombo.
Many people,
increasingly desperate, are turning to SW Radio Africa for help,
Jackson says. "They have nowhere else to turn to. So, more
and more, they turn to the radio station and send text messages
of appeal: 'I'm being attacked - can you help me?'"
The Zimbabwean
government has done its best to stop the broadcasts getting through.
In 2005, it began jamming the station's signal, with help, Jackson
believes, from the Chinese government. The station has got round
this by broadcasting on more frequencies: it is difficult and expensive
to block multiple signals, according to Bryan Coombes, the broadcast
director at VT Communications, which provides the transmission infrastructure
for SW Radio Africa. Nonetheless, the blocking of the signal is
a constant concern, and the station is now supplementing its broadcasts
with SMS messages to people's mobile phones. Currently, it sends
25,000 SMS messages a day, and 1,000 people a week are asking to
be added to the service. The station also has a website
where people can listen to live and recorded broadcasts.
Jackson's contacts
in Zimbabwe have told her that the "small amount of hope"
the station offers is something they can hold on to. This is confirmed
by Patson Muzuwa, a Zimbabwean refugee who is in constant touch
with friends back home: "People need to know that there are
other people still caring for them out there. So many people in
Zimbabwe don't know what is taking place in Harare . Without the
radio station, they wouldn't know how many people are killed, because
the state-controlled media will not publicise that."
The future,
for Zimbabwe and the radio station, is uncertain. "I don't
know how long the country can keep going," Jackson says. "The
economic situation is beyond belief, and people are literally just
dropping dead from hunger now." In the meantime, she and her
colleagues live with a "very Buddhist point of view -
we take it a minute at a time. We just keep going day by day."
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