INDIA LEARNS FROM SOUTH AFRICA'S EXPERIMENT WITH COMMUNITY RADIO

By Frederick Noronha
fred at bytesforall dot org

UDUPI, South India: This country which prides itself as the 'second
largest democracy in the world' is learning a lesson or two on deploying
radio from the young nation of South Africa.

This distant nation, that emerged from Apartheid barely a decade back,
has useful lessons on how community radio could be a powerful tool in
countries where poverty and illiteracy are still un-vanquished enemies.

"Community radio is definitely more accessible than public or commercial
radio. People at the grassroots can go to the station and say, 'This is
what we want'," says Johannesburg-based Institute for the Advancement of
Journalism radio department head Jacob Ntshangase.

Ntshangase was visiting India, where he helped in a camp meant to
promote community radio, in this small educational town on the country's
west coast. Campaigners in this country have been campaigning, so far
unsucessfully, for the past half-decade and more to legalize community
radio.

Ntshangase's IAJ works to partner the University of the Witwatersrand,
primarily to enhance journalists skills. They also support training in
neighbouring countries like Swaziland, Zambia, Zimbabwe and Lesotho.

Ntshangase believes that if South Africa could make community radio work
in a decade, so could India. Possibly more easily.

"Community radio came out of efforts of media activists, and part of the
gust of the liberalisation of the airwaves, around 1994, with the
installation of a democratically-elected government," says he.

"There were prophets of doom who said 'Give them a month and they
(community-run radio stations) are going to collapse.' But they were
made to eat their hat," says he.

Ntshangase offers insights into how community radio manages to retain
its independence while still being critical of the powers that be, and
about the functioning of the broadcasting authority.

Citing case studies of successful and not-so-successful community
stations in his part of the globe, he passes on a message -- during a
Ford Foundation-supported workshop -- that the same is possible here
too.

Radio Maritzburg in Kwazulu-Natal, the first licensed station in 1995,
is fading away, he believes. Bush radio, started illegally, has proven
to be very successful, he says. Others like Radio 786 in Cape Town are
religous stations.

(Bush Radio's logo shows a broadcaster carrying a transmitter and
literally running -- a hint of its not-so-legal origins, which later
compelled the reluctant authorities to issue it a licence!)

Ntshangase told a surprised audience, in this country of 1000+ million,
that South Africa itself -- which has less than one-twentieth the
population -- itself has about 120+ radio stations.

India itself has long been fairly closed over radio broadcasting, and
only in the past couple of years has been opening up to commercial FM,
while there are plans for building up educational radio in this country.

Hoping for an eventual opening-up, campaigners like Ntshangase and local
lobbyists discussed issues like frequency plans, regulation of licences,
allotting limited frequencies to different claimants, and the like.

"What is making community radio powerful in South Africa is that it is
accessible to the people. It's closeness to the people is making it more
strong," says Ntshangase.

Ntshangase had a few tips for campaigners here.

Community radio had to take into account the dialects of the local
communities. "South Africa has 11 official languages... it's a crazy
country," he pointed out.

If that's so, India might rate higher, having 18 officially-recognised
national languages and some 1652 mother tongues (of which 33 are spoken
by over a 100,000 people).

He suggested that campaigners "need to be united and speak with one
voice" before they could get governments to realise the relevance and
importance of legalizing community radio. And he spent time focussing on
the economics, and need for sound-management training, for community
radio.

Some radio stations in South Africa have been studied internationally
for different reasons. These include Soul City focussing on health and
women's rights, Radio Zibonele run out of an old container truck, Bush
Radio which is sometimes called "the mother of community radio in
Africa", the Rural Women's Movement-founded Moutse Community Radio,
among others.

All these were recently featured in 'Making Waves', a report to the
Rockefeller Foundation, on using communication for social change
(published 2001).

Recent reports from South Africa point out that for decades, during the
apartheid era, South African radio stations were divided along racial
lines and the media industry was used as a tool of propaganda.

But now, the airwaves are undergoing a dramatic transformation. Racial
divisions are fading as wealth changes hands in South Africa. (ENDS)

NOTE: Jacob Ntshangase can be contacted via email [EMAIL PROTECTED], or
tel 11 484 1765/6/7/8 and the IAJ's website is at http://www.iaj.org.za

--
Frederick Noronha * Freelance Journalist * Goa * India 832.409490 / 409783
BYTESFORALL www.bytesforall.org  * GNU-LINUX http://linuxinindia.pitas.com
Email [EMAIL PROTECTED] * Mobile +9822 122436 (Goa) * Saligao Goa India
Writing with a difference... on what makes *the* difference



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