Frying the wires, freeing the waves
Edwin Jurriƫns, http://insideindonesia.org/content/view/1177/47/
Grassroots organisations in Indonesia are building communication media from
the most basic of utensils

While Indonesia's big cities are saturated with many types of media, media
fare at the village level is often quite limited. In response, several
grassroots organisations have begun building a more participatory
communications infrastructure, relying on advances in technology to provide
community television facilities and cheap wireless Internet. Like existing
community radio, theatre and print media already scattered across the
archipelago, these new media have emerged as an alternative to government
and business-controlled Internet and television programming.

In 2000, residents of Timbulharjo village in Bantul, Central Java formed the
organisation Angkringan, named after the Javanese term for 'food vendor', to
build a media infrastructure that would meet the information and
communication needs of their community. Starting with an eight-page print
bulletin of local news and entertainment, within half a year, Angkringan
expanded into community radio broadcasts. During the parliamentary elections
of 2004, the organisation used mobile screening facilities to air
information about the elections. And in 2007, Angkringan began work on
establishing a local Internet network, called AngkringanNet, for
Timbulharjo.

AngkringanNet relies on the convergence of community radio broadcasting with
wireless Internet technology. Using a community radio antenna, AngkringanNet
transmits an Internet signal over the 2.4 MHz frequency, free of charge. The
signal can then be accessed by anyone in Timbulharjo with a computer and a
'wajanbolic' antenna.

Using wajanbolic receivers, browsing the Internet and sending e-mail is as
easy as frying an egg
The wajanbolic antenna is the key to the system: it is composed of an actual
wajan, or frying pan, wrapped in aluminium foil and connected to a short
tube. Once placed on a rooftop, tree or other elevated point, the linked
WiFi USB stick can be connected to one or more personal computers. Users do
not have to pay individual Internet connection fees, but can share the costs
with other users, keeping the costs per household to only several thousand
rupiah per month.

Angkringan's wajanbolic antenna is based on alternative Internet technology
pioneered by the Indonesian technology guru Onno W Purbo and students from
Muhammadiyah University in Malang. Angkringan deliberately chose the wajan,
a basic piece of cookware that can be found in almost every Indonesian
kitchen, to put people with no prior exposure to modern communication
technology at ease, and to make it clear that browsing the Internet or
sending an e-mail was as easy as frying an egg. The choice can also be seen
as a symbol of local resistance against business monopolies dominating the
computer and Internet industries.

AngkringanNet provides Timbulharjo residents with Internet links to the
outside world as well as an Intranet exclusively for the community.
Villagers are encouraged to understand and creatively engage with the
technology, and move beyond simply being end users. The AngkringanNet web
site makes available various Open Source software programs for villagers to
use. They can also contribute to the Village Database, which contains
information on local governance, economy, health and other issues.

To date, 12 wajanbolic antennas have been installed in Timbulharjo. In
various workshops, Angkringan has shared its ideas and experiences beyond
their village with representatives of other Indonesian community media
organisations. The Indonesian government, through the Department of
Communications (Depkominfo), has also donated computer equipment and
provided assistance in Internet training sessions. Angkringan plans to open
its wireless service to locally produced community television broadcasts in
the near future.

Community content

Members of Angkringan also helped establish the Association of Indonesian
Community Television (Asosiasi Televisi Komunitas Indonesia, or ATVKI), an
umbrella organisation of community television stations. Similar to
Angkringan's wajanbolic philosophy, ATVKI defines its community television
as 'from, by and for the people'. ATVKI members exchange technical
information and give each other guidance on organisation and broadcast
content.

Not coincidentally, ATVKI was founded in Grabag village in Central Java,
home of Grabag TV, one of the few active community television stations in
Indonesia. Grabag TV was founded in 2005 by Hartanto, a lecturer from the
Jakarta Institute of the Arts and native of Grabag. At the time, Grabag
residents could only receive the commercial television channel RCTI, relayed
from Jakarta by antenna because of the village's mountainous surroundings.
Hartanto built a small studio, provided basic equipment, and organised
training sessions on script-writing, filming and editing. Using the existing
antenna, villagers began broadcasting programs written and produced by their
fellow citizens.

Community TV should broadcast content 'from, by and for the people'
Currently, Grabag TV has two-hour broadcasts every Monday, Wednesday and
Friday afternoon. Any villager with an idea for a program or a general
interest in broadcasting is welcome to make a contribution. Farmers and
traders go on air to talk about their professional problems, plans and
strategies. Programs have featured students from primary and secondary
schools discussing the positive and negative effects of television on
education, part of Grabag TV's efforts to raise the media literacy of
Grabag's citizens. The art and culture programs often contain popular
Javanese dance and music performances. Grabag TV also organised live
coverage of elections for the village head, thus providing a new mechanism
for monitoring local political processes.

Costs and controversies

Grabag TV has been able to restrict its average operational costs to only
Rp. 800,000 ($A109) per month. It covers these costs with voluntary
donations from the viewers. In general, money is an important issue, but not
a major obstacle to community initiatives like Grabag TV and AngkringanNet.
Often such initiatives find more difficulties in generating innovative and
educational media content, and ensuring community participation once the
initial enthusiasm has worn off.

Community media also face regulatory and legal hurdles. In the 2003
negotiations over the allocation of broadcast frequencies by the government,
community television was passed over while public, commercial and pay
television channels were given official broadcast rights, possibly under
pressure from the broadcasting industry. The process of receiving a
community broadcasting license is also time-consuming and expensive. AKTVI
continues to fight for official broadcast frequencies and the streamlining
of broadcast licenses.

The work done by organisations like Angkringan and AKTVI illustrates the
awareness of Indonesian media activists that the struggle for free and
independent information and communication can start, but certainly will not
stop, with a WiFi USB stick and a frying pan.     ii

Edwin Jurriƫns (e.jurri...@adfa.edu.au) is a lecturer in Indonesian Language
and Culture at The University of New South Wales, Canberra.
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