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New Constitution-making process - Index of articles
State keeps its hold on airwaves
Ray Ndlovu,
Mail Guardian (SA)
July 06, 2012
http://mg.co.za/article/2012-07-05-state-keeps-its-hold-on-airwaves/
Zimbabwe's
first licensed commercial radio station, Star FM, went live last
week, putting an end to the 32-year-old monopoly enjoyed by the
state-controlled broadcaster, Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation.
But its links
to the state-owned print-media stable, Zimbabwe Newspapers, has
raised questions by observers over its presenters who read bulletins
and headlines from the state-owned newspapers.
Political analyst
Dumisani Nkomo dismissed Star FM as a viable option to open up Zimbabwe's
airwaves. "It's an extension of Zanu-PF hegemony . . .
it's the same Zanu-PF propaganda, just packaged differently",
Nkomo said.
Star FM's
first news bulletin at the launch on Monday reflected the headlines
of the state-owned Herald newspaper, which has been the source of
the public storm.
Admire Taderera,
the head of Star FM and a former deejay for the state broadcaster,
said the radio station was committed to sourcing news from all media
organisations in the country. "We are not a state broadcaster
and we don't envisage being one. We make our own money from
advertising and we are not state-funded", he said.
A second radio
station, AB Communications, owned by former journalist-cum-Zanu-PF
businessperson Supa Mandiwanzira, is expected to go on air next
month. But at least three other licence applications by independent
journalists and music presenters were turned down, according to
Associated Press.
With national
elections likely to be held in the first quarter of next year, the
Broadcasting Authority of Zimbabwe has been fiercely criticised
by the opposition Movement for Democratic Change and its civic partners
for granting licences to pro-Zanu-PF bidders. Decades-long efforts
to set up community radio stations, such as the donor-funded Radio
Dialogue, have been blocked by Zanu-PF, which has resisted opening
up the airwaves to players that could spread an anti-Zanu-PF message.
Thomas Tshabalala,
the Radio Dialogue director, said: "It is sad to note that
this is our 10th year and we have spent it fighting to get a licence.
Radio Dialogue is not yet licensed although over the years we have
continuously engaged the government without any success.
"No one
can imagine that a country that calls itself democratic will take
more than 30 years to liberalise the airwaves," Tshabalala
said.
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