Why France must rethink Polynesia radio shutdown - PFF
Why France must rethink Polynesia radio shutdown - PFF
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
14th January 2017
France
must rethink its shutdown of AM radio broadcasting in
Polynesia, says PFF, the Pacific Freedom Forum.
“People
in the outer islands of French Polynesia are rightly
complaining against the closure,” says PFF Chair Monica
Miller.
“France must rethink its decision if it values
the lives of all its citizens.”
Miller says that France
is ignoring the safety of outer islanders who rely on a
strong AM signal from Radio Polynésie Première for
emergencies, especially during frequent cyclones.
French
Polynesia has been hit by as many as five major cyclones in
one season, back in the early 1980s.
“What excuse has
France got, really, for shutting down the main source of
information for the region’s second largest territory?”
asks Miller.
“Surely the third largest economy in
Europe can afford a few thousand for keeping all its
citizens informed”, she says.
PFF is welcoming calls
from the government of French Polynesia to reconsider the
closure, and joins criticism from consumer association, Te
Tia Ara:
"These decision makers - have they thought about
these people living in harsh conditions, traveling by speed
boat from island to island? Have they thought about our
small scale fishermen going to sea, our workers in the
transport sector? What about those who cultivate copra and
who need to be reassured [of safe travel], have they thought
of those people who do not want to be deprived of a bond [to
the capital], to suffer in silence? Is it forgotten where
isolation leads to? This decision is all the more serious
because many of these inhabitants are only able to keep
themselves informed with a small battery AM radio, with
which authorities have invited these inhabitants to stay
informed, to listen to the weather and take the necessary
measures to avoid going to sea in case of a weather
depression or cyclone and also to take care of themselves,
to seek refuge when necessary. It is criminal to
deprive them of the only means of staying informed.
This relationship is vital, and so is the cohesion of our
society and the security of these inhabitants." - Makalio
Folituu, President Te Tia Ara
AM signals were shut
down in December, with the state broadcaster adding five
stations to a territorial network of 48 other FM
stations.
“FM is vulnerable to disruption even in mild
weather,” says Miller.
“By shutting down its AM
signal, France is also betraying constitutional guarantees
for press plurality,” she says.
French Polynesia joins
a growing list of Pacific nations without long range radio
broadcast capacity.
The Cook Islands next door turned
down its AM signal after the state broadcaster was
privatised in the early 1990s.
For years after, Cook
Islanders outside the capital Rarotonga tuned into Samoa
radio, 2AP.
But then a decade later Samoa almost
privatised state radio, eventually deciding to cut back
signal strength and staff numbers.
Australia is set to
shut down shortwave broadcasting to the region on 17th
Januarythis month.
Since 2008, PFF has also raised alerts
over political interference in news media, including
assaults, arrests, legal threats, censorship, suspension and
sacking of staff in West Papua, East Timor, Papua New
Guinea, Solomon Islands, Nauru, Vanuatu, Fiji, the Cook
Islands and French Polynesia.
"Governments need to stop
seeing news media as their enemy", says Miller.
Instead,
she says, they should see the Fourth Estate as partners -
frontline first responders to disasters, and the most
effective and efficient protection for citizens and
economies against corruption, waste and
mismanagement.
Radio Polynésie Première started
broacasting as Radio Tahiti, for three hours a day, in
1949.
MORE
Loss of
AM radio irks French Polynesia
http://www.radionz.co.nz/international/pacific-news/321809/loss-of-am-radio-irks-french-polynesia
Call
to restore AM radio in French Polynesia
http://www.radionz.co.nz/international/pacific-news/322025/call-to-restore-am-radio-in-french-polynesia
Suppression
de la radio AM : État et Pays montent au créneau
(French)
http://www.tahiti-infos.com/Suppression-de-la-radio-AM-Etat-et-Pays-montent-au-creneau_a156644.html#