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U.S.
media expert says Zim can learn from U.S. broadcasting experience
U.S. Embassy Public Affairs Section
September 24, 2009
An American media expert
says Zimbabwe can learn from the experience of the U.S. to provide
a platform for under-represented and specialist communities through
community broadcasting.
"It took nearly
30 years before both the government and the American population
discovered that there was an unheard voice, an unheard community,
a niche not being filled and reported about and community radio
was going to help cover those communities," said Stephen Coon,
Emeritus Associate Professor at Greenlee School of Journalism and
Communication at Iowa State University.
Coon was in Zimbabwe
on a Visiting Speaker Program sponsored by the U. S. Embassy in
Harare. The Visiting Speaker Program allows U.S. experts and personalities
to meet directly with foreign publics through lectures, workshops
and seminars to discuss American policies, society and culture.
The U.S. government granted
its first commercial radio license in 1920, but it was in 1949 that
the first community broadcasting station went on air.
Coon said the impetus
for community broadcasting in the U.S. was assisted by enabling
legislation noting that the U.S. government set aside a specific
portion of the FM band frequency 'exclusively and specifically'
for non-commercial radio stations.
"What
we are doing with community radio in the U.S. is trying to meet
the needs of specific groups and communities. Since 2000, the U.S.
government has . . . encouraged individuals to apply for low power
FM stations. The coverage is really small compared with commercial
radio stations but it reaches the targeted audience," Coon
told participants at a discussion forum organized by the Media
Institute of Southern Africa (MISA-Zimbabwe) Harare Advocacy
Committee at the Book Café' last week.
Zimbabweans
expect community radio stations to start operating following the
liberalization of the broadcasting sector in 2000 which culminated
in the promulgation of the Broadcasting
Services Act. The law was revised in 2007 and in August this
year Parliament submitted a list of names to the Ministry of Media,
Information and Publicity for consideration into the Broadcasting
Authority of Zimbabwe. The BAZ is expected to invite and consider
licenses from broadcasters, as well as allocate frequencies. The
delays have been criticized by civic media groups.
"Although Zimbabwe
got its independence in 1980, its constitutional claims of being
a democracy have been dented by government's failure to facilitate
the licensing of private players including community radios,"
said Kumbirai Mafunda, chairperson of MISA Zimbabwe Harare Advocacy
Committee. MISA Zimbabwe has for the past several years been lobbying
the government to relax restrictive provisions of media laws to
allow alternative broadcasters in the media sector.
Coon chronicled the specific
challenges facing community radio broadcasting, chief among which
are sustainability, competition and professionalism.
"Sustainability
of these media remains a key challenge throughout the world,"
said Coon. In the U.S., said Coon, community radio stations receive
financial support from an independent federal agency- the Corporation
for Public Broadcasting - but these funds are limited due to increasing
demand. As a result, a number of community broadcasters have devised
a variety of fundraising initiatives to sustain their operations.
In addition to funding
challenges, community radio often do not have as high of professional
standards as those found in commercial broadcasting, said Coon.
"Many
community radio stations operate on limited budgets. Most rely on
volunteers and the challenge is to keep volunteers motivated. The
quality of the news reporting and production is not as quite competitive
as the commercial radio stations. That can be overcome," said
Coon who conducted training sessions for radio production training
sessions for aspiring community radio stations in Harare and Bulawayo.
Despite the proliferation
of different media including new media, community radio remains
popular in the U.S. because "we still have voices, we still
have issues, we still have topics that are still being reported
on. We have communities that want to say something, have something
to say, and have issues and concerns that need to be reported about.
The mainstream media in the U.S. are simply not doing that,"
said Coon.
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