Charles Charpentier on Fri, 9 Apr 1999 08:46:04 +0300 |
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Syndicate: Fw: U.S. Launches 24-Hour Broadcasts to Serbia |
I just received this from USIA, I thought that I would pass it along for your information.......... >U.S. LAUNCHES 24-HOUR BROADCASTS TO SERBIA >(Transmitters erected to beam unbiased news) (640) >By Charlene Porter >USIA Staff Writer > >Washington -- The chairman of the U.S. Broadcasting Board of Governors >(BBG) have announced that the government's international broadcasters >will launch round-the-clock programming into Yugoslavia starting on April >8. > >Chairman Marc Nathanson expressed concern about a "media blackout" in >Yugoslavia and said, "We must get our message to the Serbian people, and >that message is just unbiased news and information about what is going on >in Kosovo and the rest of the world." > >Programming from the Serbian language services of the Voice of America >(VOA) and Radio Free Europe (RFE) will be broadcast into Yugoslavia via a >ring of FM transmitters that is being erected "at a frantic pace" around >the Balkan nation. Nathanson said VOA and RFE are working with the U.S. >Agency for International Development to put up a transmitter "in an >emergency fashion" to begin broadcasts from a neighboring nation. > >The initial broadcasts will be carried on frequency 106.5 FM MHZ, >reaching Belgrade and most of northern Serbia. The broadcasting board >chairman said later expansion of the broadcasts will allow complete >coverage of the country. > >Nathanson did not specify from which nation the first broadcasts are to >begin. He said Bosnia, Bulgaria and Romania have entered agreements with >the U.S. to host the transmitter sites. He said the U.S. State >Department is still negotiating with other nations in the region to win >their support for the emergency broadcasting project. > >Ultimately, Nathanson said the government's intent is to build as many as >six or seven transmitters to support the 24-hour-a-day broadcasts to >Yugoslavia. The broadcasts will be delivered in Serbian, as well as some >programming in Bosnian, Croatian, Albanian and English. > >Nathanson said that some U.S. government broadcasts are still being >transmitted into Yugoslavia on shortwave and AM frequencies. He said the >organization's surveys indicate, however, that FM broadcasting is an >important news source for 52 percent of Serbia's population. > >Previously U.S. government broadcasters have had a presence on the FM >band in Yugoslavia, but Nathanson says VOA, RFE and other foreign >broadcasters were all pulled from local stations by Serbian authorities >at the beginning of the NATO bombing campaign. Independent media have >also been taken off the air, leaving Yugoslav government-controlled media >as the dominant news source in the country. > >The U.S. government broadcasters are also trying to reach out to their >audiences via the Internet, and report more than 2.2 million site >connections for web sites operated by VOA and RFE since March 21. >Information provided by the BBG showed a one-day surge of more than >512,000 connections on March 26. The Internet will also be a crucial >mechanism for informing the Yugoslav audience about the frequencies where >they can tune in to the new U.S. programming. > >The chief of VOA's Southern European Division Frank Shkreli told a press >conference that virtually 100 percent of their programming is now related >to the events in Serbia and Kosovo. He said freelance journalists are >providing reports from Macedonia, but stringers in Kosovo and Serbia are >unable to file on the current conflict. > >Shkreli, an Albanian-American, says broadcasters in his division are >still following the regional view of the unfolding situation by >interviewing officials in Kosovo and Belgrade. Recently, VOA's Serbian >language service interviewed Yugoslav Deputy Prime Minister Vuk >Draskovic, Shkreli said. > >Nathanson said the new programming will include the U.S. government >perspective, foreign commentary, general news and the view from Belgrade. > But he re-emphasized that the BBG's main concern is the "one-sided" >media reporting from Belgrade. "To say that the people of Kosovo, the >Albanians, are walking to the refugee camps because they're afraid of >NATO bombing is just not the true facts." > >*** > >************************************************************* >For more information regarding the latest policy statements and other >materials related to the Kosovo crisis, visit >http://www.usia.gov/regional/eur/balkans/kosovo/ > >To subscribe to KOSOVO, send the command/message >SUBSCRIBE KOSOVO Firstname Lastname >to: >LISTSERV@INFO.USIA.GOV ------Syndicate mailinglist-------------------- Syndicate network for media culture and media art information and archive: http://www.v2.nl/east/ to unsubscribe, write to <syndicate-request@aec.at> in the body of the msg: unsubscribe your@email.adress