ABC’s shortwave cutback ‘weakens thin link’ for Pacific
AUSTRALIA: ABC’s shortwave cutback ‘weakens thin
link’ for Pacific, says PMC
http://www.pmc.aut.ac.nz/pacific-media-watch/australia-abc-s-shortwave-cutback-weakens-thin-link-pacific-says-pmc-10207
Thursday, August 9, 2018
By Leilani Sitagata of
Pacific Media Watch
AUCKLAND (Asia Pacific
Report/Pacific Media Watch): The Australian Broadcasting
Corporation’s cutback in services to the Asia-Pacific
region has “weakened the thin link” that many parts of
the region have with the “outside world”, says the
Pacific Media Centre.
In a public submission to the government review of broadcasting to the region, the PMC said that the situation had impelled Radio New Zealand to “stretch their resources to do more, to ‘make up’ for what has been removed”.
The ABC switched off shortwave services to the region in 2017.
READ MORE: China takes over Radio Australia
frequencies
Calling for the ABC to restore
services, the PMC said “Australian broadcasting from the
South Pacific is a sorry loss to people and cultures – as
we know them well from the accumulation of studies and from
our own media production exercises at this centre”.
The
PMC at Auckland University of Technology publishes the
independent Asia Pacific Report, Pacific Media Watch freedom
monitoring service, Pacific Journalism Review and other
publications.
AUT’s radio major coordinator in the
School of Communication Studies, Dr Matt Mollgaard, stresses
the importance of broadcasting services from countries such
as Australia and New Zealand to the South
Pacific.
“[Broadcasters] help to strengthen local media outlets in the Islands, further enhancing democratic developments in the region,” Dr Mollgaard said in his PJR research paper cited by the PMC submission.
Media freedom
He said
broadcasting services like RNZ Pacific and Radio Australia
were prime examples of upholding media freedom and
encouraging democratic life.
The PMC submission was
prepared by director Professor David Robie and centre
research associate and PJR editorial board member Dr Lee Duffield.
Restoration of Radio Australia services and other ABC services that may be made accessible in the South Pacific region, would be “highly positive”, said the submission.
“It would be most widely welcomed in the island countries, valued, and made good use of as in the past, with assuredly benefits to the originating media service and to Australian interests.”
The review is looking at the reach of Australia’s media in the Asia-Pacific region and if shortwave radio has become an outdated technology.
The submission period closed last Friday and the review of Australian broadcasting services is currently underway.
Public submissions have been overwhelmingly in favour of restoration of services.
‘Tok Pisin broadcasts’
In one public submission published by Asia Pacific Report, development worker Elizabeth Cox, who has 40 years of experience of living and working in Papua New Guinea, appealed for the return of a “revitalised Radio Australia”.
“Bring back Radio Australia. Ensure it reaches all rural areas,” she said.
“Provide Tok Pisin broadcasts. This is one of the best forms of aid you can give PNG.”
“A revitalised Radio Australia will give the PNG and other international audiences a chance to shape content and direction – it can be linked to social media and inform and lift the quality of much of the local political conversation,” she said.
“The new Radio Australia should be a global friend and ally, not a coloniser or converter. It should encourage debate, conversation and support critical, independent and objective opinion.”
The Vanuatu Daily Post submission calling for restoration of services said broadcast communications were an essential projection of soft power.
“The lack of access to the eyes and ears—and therefore the hearts and minds—of Pacific islanders works to the detriment of Australian interests,” the newspaper said.
“It also works against the interest of Pacific
nations.”
• The PMC submission to the Australian
broadcasting review
• Short wave radio saves lives and foreign aid
dollars
• ABC now little more than ‘croak into the
ether’