Radio Non Grata
When the group Reporters Without Borders was banned from the United Nations' ongoing "World Summit on the Information Society" in Geneva, it decided to broadcast its message to the delegates via a pirate radio station instead:
Robert Menard, Secretary-General of the Paris-based group Reporters Without Borders, told a news conference the service -- Radio Non Grata -- would put the organisation's point of view to delegates throughout the three-day conference.
"We will also be broadcasting details of press freedom violations by many of the countries taking part in this meeting, like Tunisia and Zimbabwe," he declared.
The gathering, the World Summit on the Information Society, was called by the United Nations in an effort to speed the spread of information technology and the use of the Internet to poorer countries.
But critics from some human rights groups say it is a costly sham that will bring no benefit to ordinary people.
Reporters Without Borders, which says one-third of the world's people live in countries with no media freedom and that many journalists around the globe are in prison "for doing their job," is handing out tiny portable radios and earphones to delegates so they can receive its broadcasts.
Not surprisingly, the station was quickly forced off the air. You can still hear the broadcasts, though, on the group's website.
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Why not simply spend the time to set up a legal radio station? As I recall, it has been several months since UN banned them.
Below from Jerusalem Post:
"A month after the Arutz Sheva pirate settler radio
station went off the air for broadcasting illegally, Attorney General Elyakim Rubinstein on Thursday instructed police to investigate whether the station's internet site station incited to violence.
Rubinstein said he had looked into and found valid a complaint by MK Zehava Gal'on (Meretz), who claimed that an article on the site entitled, "Expulsion, not Transfer" by Gil Ronen constituted a violation of laws against incitement.
Last month, senior operators of the station were
convicted by the Jerusalem Magistrate's Court for
broadcasting illegally for transmitting from a ship within Israeli territorial waters and from the West Bank without the required permits from 1995 to 1998.
The station, which served as the voice of the
ideological Right for 15 years, went off the air hours after the October 20 court ruling."
Here's the URL for Arutz Sheva. I love it.
http://www.israelnationalnews.com/
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DATE: 02/28/2004 02:51:40
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