Monday, 9 February 2009

[creative-radio] Digest Number 2563

There are 5 messages in this issue.

Topics in this digest:

1. MENA [in] ARABIC/ AMARC Press Release on Jor gov refusal of CR licen
From: tamara aqrabawe

2. The Promise of Ubiquity: Mobile as Media Platform in the Global Sout
From: George Lessard

3a. PATNA, India: Community radio stations to be set up for farmers
From: George Lessard
3b. Re: PATNA, India: Community radio stations to be set up for farmers
From: Vickram Crishna

4. MENA ARABIC/ AMARC Press Release on Jor gov refusal of CR license /
From: tamara aqrabawe


Messages
________________________________________________________________________
1. MENA [in] ARABIC/ AMARC Press Release on Jor gov refusal of CR licen
Posted by: "tamara aqrabawe" aqrabawe@yahoo.com.au aqrabawe
Date: Sun Feb 8, 2009 10:59 am ((PST))

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secretariat@si.amarc.org
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dkuttab@ammannet.net�



----------

To Subcribe or remove your name:
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[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]


Messages in this topic (1)
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
2. The Promise of Ubiquity: Mobile as Media Platform in the Global Sout
Posted by: "George Lessard" media@web.net themediamentor
Date: Sun Feb 8, 2009 8:07 pm ((PST))

Download
- Executive Summary
and the
- Full Report as PDF documents... for free... at...

http://www.internews.fr/spip.php?article459

African peasants paint their mobile phone number over their front doors.
Indian slum dwellers buy SIM cards to use on friends' handsets. Chinese
students spend three months' allowance on a phone they can use to surf the
web. Once almost the exclusive domain of rich countries, the mobile
revolution has swept through the developing world. An estimated 3.8
billion people, or half the world's population, own a mobile, and most of
the growth is taking place in the global South. This has deep implications
for the media, but the change has been so rapid that it has completely
overtaken most media outlets - they are struggling to digest its impact.

The Promise of Ubiquity was commissioned by Internews Europe in order to
help the media to understand the exciting potential, the incredible
challenges and the perils of refusing to change. What kind of information
services can be carried on the mobile now and in the next five years? Is
the mobile viable as an information channel even when many new users may
be illiterate? There may be few right answers, but author John West
provides a roadmap on how to navigate through the brave new world of
mobile telephony. West suggests a checklist of useful questions and of
some best practices which have emerged so far.

Through interviews with leaders in the field – software engineers and
designers, journalists, and businessmen – the book examines current and
future trends, from the dominance of SMS texting to mobile Web, and
suggests approaches on how media outlets can negotiate with network
operators as well as decide what services to offer.

"A lot of the most interesting innovation in mobiles
is coming from the South - financial transactions,
M-government and so on." - Ken Banks, FrontlineSMS

Innovator case studies:

"What the mobile medium allowed was the creation of a news service at a
very low cost. We have got to the stage where we are now challenging the
established media here." Chamath Airyadasa is a Sri Lankan journalist who
set up his own news organisation using texts, called Jasmine News Wire. As
of mid-2008 JNW had around 100,000 subscribers paying 30 US cents a month
across Sri Lanka's four mobile phone networks to receive a news alerts
service.

"The idea really was to write software that could get information out and
get information back over the mobile phone." Ken Banks developed
FrontlineSMS in 2005 after realizing that the mobile was beginning to make
inroads into rural regions of Africa, where the Internet was still
non-existent. FrontlineSMS is a free-to-use SMS server program which when
installed on a computer allows it to use an attached mobile phone to
structure text messages out and back. It is now in use in over 50
countries. Some current uses include monitoring of Nigeria's elections in
2007 by activists, delivering crop prices to farmers in Aceh, Indonesia,
health care services in Malawi, news alerts in Iraq, and security news for
NGO workers in Afghanistan.

"Particularly in the health sector, we are seeing many organisations
preparing to use SMS as a kind of instant expert service." Bobby Soriano
is a programmer and activist based in Manila who has been working on SOS
SMS, a service for Filipinos working abroad. The service has evolved
quickly from dealing only with emergency calls into a broader information
service which handles any kind of query from the hundreds of thousands of
Filipinos working in the Gulf region and elsewhere.
Internews ahead of the technology curve

Internews Europe has been on the forefront of media work with mobile
phones in the South. It set up text messaging services for journalists in
the aftermath of the devastating earthquake in Java, Indonesia in 2006.
Since then, it has continued to innovate with mobile use in emergency
response situations as well as in closed country environments.

John West has pioneered use of new technologies for media applications in
developing countries since running instant message chats live from Baghdad
in December 1998 to 14,000 AOL users during US bomb attacks. In 1999, he
won the prestigious European Internet Journalist of the Year award given
by City University in London. From 2002 to 2004, he led an Internews
project in Afghanistan which established 30 FM radio stations around the
country, fully digitised and linked by satellite to production networks.
In 2008, he introduced mobile phone-based information services in Iraq by
evolving a system of real-time news alerts over SMS with a national news
agency.

For more information, please contact:
- Elsa Caternet – Project Director, ecaternet AT internews DOT fr
- Jun Julien Matsushita - Program Manager, jmatsushita AT internews DOT fr


Messages in this topic (1)
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
3a. PATNA, India: Community radio stations to be set up for farmers
Posted by: "George Lessard" media@web.net themediamentor
Date: Sun Feb 8, 2009 9:25 pm ((PST))

Community radio stations to be set up for farmers
Times of India - India

<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Cities/Patna/Community_radio_stations_to_be_set_up_for_farmers/articleshow/4093319.cms>

Community radio stations to be set up for farmers
8 Feb 2009, 0538 hrs IST, Sanjeev Kumar Verma, TNN


PATNA: Farmers in Bihar would soon have their first brush with community
radio. To be set up under the Agriculture Technology Management Agency
(ATMA) Project of Union ministry of agriculture, the community radio would
air programmes catering to the needs of the farming community.

Apart from airing informative programmes about the latest farming
practices and the precaution the farmers should take to safeguard their
standing crops, programmes based on lives of successful farmers of a given
area would also be aired. Then, the community radio would provide
localised weather reports.

In the first phase, three such community radio stations would come up at
Krishi Vikas Kendra (KVK) Birauli in Samastipur, KVK Barh in Patna and KVK
Jamui. The Union ministry has provided over Rs 31 lakh for each such radio
station out of which about 14 lakh would be spent on equipment and the
balance amount would be spent on the programming head and recurring
expenditure.

"Community radio is going to play a very positive role for farmers, as it
would be localised in nature, with its service area limited to the
surrounding areas only and farmers would get area specific inputs for
improving the farming practices," said Bihar Agricultural Management &
Extension Training Institute (BAMETI) director R K Sohane. BAMETI is the
state level co-ordinator for implementation of ATMA project in the state.

He said that the funds for the said radio stations have already been
received and BAMETI has applied to the ministry of information and
broadcasting for licences for starting the community radio stations.
"Vigilance teams have already visited the sites where radio stations would
be set up. Hence, we are expecting the licences very soon," Sohane added.

BAMETI, meanwhile, has started work on deciding the programme contents
which would be aired daily for two hours. "KVK scientists and those from
the agriculture university as well as successful farmers would play a
major role in preparing these programmes," he said and added that local
soil and climatic conditions would be given due weightage while giving any
information to the farmers through these programmes.

Incidentally, the proposed community radio stations would be first of its
kind in Bihar as far as farmers' centric programmes are concerned. In the
southern states as well as in the neighbouring Uttar Pradesh, experiments
with community radio has proved to be very beneficial. "Farmers of these
states have appreciated the move and we expect similar kind of response in
Bihar as well," Sohane said.

Messages in this topic (2)
________________________________________________________________________
3b. Re: PATNA, India: Community radio stations to be set up for farmers
Posted by: "Vickram Crishna" v1clist@yahoo.co.uk
Date: Sun Feb 8, 2009 10:15 pm ((PST))

"Farmers in Bihar would soon have their first brush with communityradio."


"Apart from airing informative programmes about the latest farming practices and the precaution the farmers should take to safeguard their standing crops, programmes based on lives of successful farmers of a given area would also be aired. Then, the community radio would provide localised weather reports."

It is really wonderful (I don't think, just in case the strength of my irony is lost on some Gentle Readers) that these 3 stations will provide the kind of programming that numerous public service stations could not in sixty years of independent broadcasting.

For the information of listmembers who are not familiar with India, the country has had over 300 stations set up following the declaration of independence in 1947, and while it can be no one's case that they are sufficient, each of India's (now 30) states (semi-autonomous administrative and political regions) have multiple stations. Bihar was once one of the biggest and most populous states, but was truncated a couple of years back to create an independent hill state, that ought to be more attuned to the needs of hill people.

The community media movement in India almost completely functions on its own, with some non-financial support from groups like AMARC, Open Access and so on. This contrasts quite remarkably with the funding and organisation of special interest groups, including USIA, BBC and others, who have been nudging India's non-government media towards privatisation.

It surprises me that virtually none of the global independent community movements have found it interesting to help India's local counterparts work in a more focused manner, to build up visible, vocal and vote-worthy support, that could actually see radio (to begin with: terrestrial television is also a fairly accessibly media form for much of India's potential audience, 70 per cent of whom live in non-urban areas) be taken seriously by the bureaucrats (and their so-called political masters) who continue to strangle it.

Vickram
http://communicall.wordpress.com
http://vvcrishna.wordpress.com


________________________________
From: George Lessard <media@web.net>
To: creative-radio@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Monday, 9 February, 2009 10:56:20
Subject: [creative-radio] PATNA, India: Community radio stations to be set up for farmers


Community radio stations to be set up for farmers
Times of India - India

<http://timesofindia .indiatimes. com/Cities/ Patna/Community_ radio_stations_ to_be_set_ up_for_farmers/ articleshow/ 4093319.cms>

Community radio stations to be set up for farmers
8 Feb 2009, 0538 hrs IST, Sanjeev Kumar Verma, TNN

PATNA: Farmers in Bihar would soon have their first brush with community
radio. To be set up under the Agriculture Technology Management Agency
(ATMA) Project of Union ministry of agriculture, the community radio would
air programmes catering to the needs of the farming community.

Apart from airing informative programmes about the latest farming
practices and the precaution the farmers should take to safeguard their
standing crops, programmes based on lives of successful farmers of a given
area would also be aired. Then, the community radio would provide
localised weather reports.

In the first phase, three such community radio stations would come up at
Krishi Vikas Kendra (KVK) Birauli in Samastipur, KVK Barh in Patna and KVK
Jamui. The Union ministry has provided over Rs 31 lakh for each such radio
station out of which about 14 lakh would be spent on equipment and the
balance amount would be spent on the programming head and recurring
expenditure.

"Community radio is going to play a very positive role for farmers, as it
would be localised in nature, with its service area limited to the
surrounding areas only and farmers would get area specific inputs for
improving the farming practices," said Bihar Agricultural Management &
Extension Training Institute (BAMETI) director R K Sohane. BAMETI is the
state level co-ordinator for implementation of ATMA project in the state.

He said that the funds for the said radio stations have already been
received and BAMETI has applied to the ministry of information and
broadcasting for licences for starting the community radio stations.
"Vigilance teams have already visited the sites where radio stations would
be set up. Hence, we are expecting the licences very soon," Sohane added.

BAMETI, meanwhile, has started work on deciding the programme contents
which would be aired daily for two hours. "KVK scientists and those from
the agriculture university as well as successful farmers would play a
major role in preparing these programmes," he said and added that local
soil and climatic conditions would be given due weightage while giving any
information to the farmers through these programmes.

Incidentally, the proposed community radio stations would be first of its
kind in Bihar as far as farmers' centric programmes are concerned. In the
southern states as well as in the neighbouring Uttar Pradesh, experiments
with community radio has proved to be very beneficial. "Farmers of these
states have appreciated the move and we expect similar kind of response in
Bihar as well," Sohane said.



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]


Messages in this topic (2)
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
4. MENA ARABIC/ AMARC Press Release on Jor gov refusal of CR license /
Posted by: "tamara aqrabawe" aqrabawe@yahoo.com.au aqrabawe
Date: Sun Feb 8, 2009 10:16 pm ((PST))

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ÎáÇá ÇáÊÖÇãä æÇáÊæÇÕá æÇáÊÚÇæä.
 
ãáÇÍÙÉ:  ÞÏãÊ ÃãÇÑß ÑÓÇáÉ Åáì ÑÆíÓ ÇáæÒÑÇÁ äÇÕÑ ÇáÐåÈí ÈÊÇÑÎ 16/2/2009 Ýí ãÇ íÊÚáÞ ÈÞÑÇÑ ÇáÍßæãÉ ÇáÓÇÈÞÉ ÈÔÃä ÅÕÏÇÑ ÊÑÎíÕ Ýí ãäØÞÉ ÇáÒÑÞÇÁ æáßä áã  íÊã ÊáÞí Ãí ÑÏ ãä ÑÆíÓ ÇáæÒÑÇÁ.
 
áãÒíÏ ãä ÇáãÚáæãÇÊ:
ãÇÑÓíááæ ÓæáíÑÝíÓäÒ¡ ÓßÑÊíÑ ÚÇã ÃãÇÑß
secretariat@si.amarc.org
ÏÇæÏ ßÊÇÈ¡ ãÏíÑ ÚÇã ÅÐÇÚÉ ÚãÇä äÊ æäÇÆÈ ÑÆíÓ ÃãÇÑß
dkuttab@ammannet.net 



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