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Radio Australia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
International broadcasting service of Australia

ABC Radio Australia
TypeRadio network
Country
Australia
AvailabilityInternational
OwnerAustralian Broadcasting Corporation
Launch date
20 December 1939
Official website
ABC Asia (Asia–Pacific)
ABC Pacific (Pacific)
LanguageEnglish,Pidgin,French

ABC Radio Australia, also known asRadio Australia, is the internationalbroadcasting and online service operated by theAustralian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC), Australia'spublic broadcaster. Most programming is inEnglish, with some inTok Pisin.

Radio Australia broadcasts on FM transmitters in seven countries across thePacific Islands, to theIndo-Pacific region via satellite, and to the rest of world via online streaming.[1]

History

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Programme Delivery

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Short-wave services from the Australian Broadcasting Corporation were officially opened in a ceremony byPrime Minister of AustraliaRobert Menzies on 20 December 1939.[2][3] One of the functions of Australian shortwave broadcasting was to counterpropaganda by theAxis powers, particularly that of Japan.[3] However, the ABC'stransmitters were much weaker than the Japanese or German services. The transmitter ofAWA nearSydney had 10kilowatts (kW) of power, and stations VLR and VLW had 2 kW each.[4]

RA English schedule, January 1989

Radio Australia had a considerable range of broadcasts to the Asian region in the 1970s and 1980s,[citation needed] and was hugely popular in China, where the only alternative was the state media controlled by theChinese Communist Party.[5] During thefirst Gulf War in 1990/91 theDarwin station provided valuable information and support to expatriate Australians caught in Iraq, and others working in places like Saudi Arabia.[citation needed]

In 1993, the ABC launched itsinternational TV broadcasting, but Radio Australia's budget was cut significantly under theHoward government, causing the closure of itsCantonese,Thai andFrench services, as well as shutting down the short-wave transmitter to South-East and North-East Asia. This move was condemned by newspaper editors (including that ofThe Australian) and politicians alike, who saw the loss of Australia's ability to wield "soft power" in the region.[5] The Mansfield Review which had led to the cuts also suggested that international television could be supported by theDepartment of Foreign Affairs & Trade. Due to financial and political pressures transmissions from Darwin'sCox Peninsula were also shut down in the late 1990s.[3]

In January 2017 the ABC terminated its lastshort-wave radio broadcasts to the Pacific region.Vanuatu's prime minister,Charlot Salwai, expressed concern, with his country having been helped by the short-wave service duringCyclone Pam in 2015; short-wave transmission is capable of reaching remote islands without FM services, enabling the provision of emergency information and warnings. ABC's former frequencies were bought byChina Radio International, China'snational broadcaster.[5] ABC bossMichelle Guthrie was grilled in theSenate Estimates over axing short-wave radio broadcasting in February 2017.[6] The decision attracted criticism fromcattle station owners,Indigenous ranger groups and fishermen, who argue it was done without community consultation and would deprive people in remote areas of vital emergency warnings, leading toNick Xenophon introducing legislation to force ABC to reinstate short-wave radio service.[7] In September 2017 theNick Xenophon Team announced it had negotiated a review of the reach of Australian broadcasting services in the Asia Pacific region, including examining if short-wave technology should be included in the Government's Media Reform Bill.[8]

In December 2019, ABC Radio Australia celebrated 80 years of international radio broadcasting.[9]

Transmission facilities

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In almost 80 years of terrestrial service, Radio Australia has utilised a wide range of transmission facilities for delivery of its programmes to target areas, both from within Australia and from established international broadcasting sites overseas.

Shepparton, Vic (1941–2017)

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In 1941, following consultation between theBritish andAustralian governments, a transmitter site inShepparton,Victoria was selected, in part because of a flat landscape and soilconductivity. The site was completed in 1944 with one 50 kW and two 100 kW transmitters. The station was then formally named Radio Australia.[10]

Carnarvon, WA (1976–1996)

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In the 1970s, test transmissions began from the 250 kW transmitter early in December 1975 and official test broadcasts began a couple of weeks later on 20 December 1975, the second transmitter was the 100 kW Harris and this unit began test broadcasts on 15 February in 1976, third transmitter, rated at 300 kW and designated as VLM, was taken into regular service on 6 May 1984, and the station was finally closed on 31 July 1996.

Cox Peninsula, Darwin, NT (1966–1997)

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A new transmitting facility was installed by thePostmaster-General's Department atCox Peninsula nearDarwin in the late 1960s, rebroadcasting programs emanating from Radio Australia studios inMelbourne. Equipment included threeCollins Radio 250 kW HF transmitters and fivelog-periodic antennas directed atEast Asia andSouth-east Asia. The antennas were largely demolished byCyclone Tracy on 25 December 1974, and Radio Australia broadcasts from this locality were not reinstated byTelecom Australia until about 1988.[citation needed]

Bald Hills, Brisbane, Qld (1973–1976)

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In 1941, the PMGD acquired a site and then established transmission facilities atBald Hills,Brisbane. The site was principally intended for the AM national broadcasting services4QG and4QR, but also for ABC HF Inland Service to serve remote northwest Queensland. From late 1973 to 1976 the site relayed the Radio Australia Papua New Guinea service on 11880 kHz.On the Air

Brandon, Qld (1989–2015)

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The high power ABC AM station,4QN Townsville, had been operating from a site atBrandon, south ofTownsville since the early 1950s.On the Air In 1988, three STC 10 kW transmitters were relocated from the Lyndhurst site which had recently closed. Also relocated from Lyndhurst was a rotatable log periodic antenna, locked in direction towards Papua New Guinea. Scheduled transmissions commenced 7 May 1989 on 6020 kHz. A second phase of implementation commenced shortly thereafter with the installation of two TCI curtain arrays, one beamed towards PNG and the other towards the Coral Sea and beyond (Solomon Islands and Vanuatu). Portion of the antenna was salvaged from the cyclone damaged Cox Peninsula facility.

Shepparton, Vic – Amateur Radio (2020)

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On 14–15 March 2020 the Shepparton and District Amateur Radio Club organised a special event station VI3RA, with amateur radio operators connecting their equipment to the disused antenna arrays at the Shepparton site in order to communicate with amateur radio operators worldwide.

Target areas

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Radio Australia's short-wave signal was primarily aimed at theAsia-Pacific region. Programming was broadcast in multiple languages, namelyEnglish,Mandarin Chinese,Vietnamese,Indonesian,Khmer,French,Burmese, andTok Pisin (acreole language commonly spoken inPapua New Guinea). A daily Pacific news bulletin ispodcast in French.[11] Though Radio Australia did not directly targetNorth America via shortwave, some of its transmissions could be heard in those areas. ABC Radio Australia's satellite signals also broadcasts to the Indo-Pacific via Intelsat-18 and Intelsat-20 satellites.

A special log periodic antenna with 18dB gain was placed at the Shepparton site for the 1956 Olympics to target Europe for coverage of the games. It was directed 128 degrees (E by SE) at the long path across the South Pacific, Central America and the North Atlantic to Europe. The path was open on the 25 m Band for about two hours in the morning (Europe). A 50 kW transmitter was used to drive it. A daily program for Europe was maintained for a long time. The transmissions for Asia (with opposite direction of 308 degrees) were easily received in Europe.[12]

Radio Australia could also be heard onCBC Radio across Canada during their overnight broadcast.[13] The station resumedFiji transmission through negotiations with the Ministry of Information and theFiji Broadcasting Corporation (FBC) in July 2012. Radio Australia can be heard on 106.6FM in main cities ofFiji.[14]

Radio Australia programs are also available viathe Internet. These services are streamed from machines hosted byAkamai Technologies inSteinsel,Luxembourg ensuring good network connectivity for listeners in Europe.[citation needed]

DomesticAsia Pacific program

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Asia Pacific was a regional news and current affairs program broadcast from Tuesday to Saturday at 12:05 am and repeated at 5 am onRadio National, for a domestic audience, from around or before 2009.[15] It was created by Radio Australia,Asia Pacific was first launched in April 1998, and it ran until August 2014 after sixteen years on air.[16] Schedule changes by ABC Radio Australia in 2013 saw the show lose its domestic radio audience.[citation needed]

Programming

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Radio Australia's English language programs consist of material produced by ABC Radio Australia, and also other ABC radio networks such asABC Local Radio,Radio National,ABC Classic FM,Triple J,Triple J Unearthed,Double J,ABC Sport, andABC NewsRadio, as well asSBS Radio's SBS Gagana Samoan program.

On the Record

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On 4 July 2023, Radio Australia launched its new weekly music show,On The Record, hosted by Samoan-Australian music journalist, broadcaster, and content producer Sosefina Fuamoli. It features well-known artists from around the Pacific region, such as Tiana Khasi, Sprigga Mek, and Joji Malani, and is broadcast to Papua New Guinea, Fiji, and Samoa.[17] Fuamoli wrote forThe AU Review from about 2011 until 2018, taking up the position of editor-in-chief in January 2016. She left to start to a new role attriple j.[18] Her work has appeared inRolling Stone Australia,NME Australia,Junkee, andThe Australian, among other publications, and she has acted as a judge in many major music awards.[17] In 2020, she won the award for best Live Music Journalist at theNational Live Music Awards.[19] In 2021, she began hosting "Window Seat" on community radio station3RRR inMelbourne,[20] where she is based.[21]

Controversies

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Indonesian killings in 1965–1966

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Radio Australia has been implicated in theIndonesian mass killings of 1965–66 for its propaganda broadcasts that contributed to the anti-Communist hysteria in Indonesia.[22][23] At the time Radio Australia was the most popular foreign radio station in Indonesia and had a high signal strength.[24][23][25] It was popular with students as it was the only station in Indonesia to playrock music.[24] TheIndonesian National Armed Forces gave Radio Australia daily briefings on what it should report and what phrases should be used.[26] The station was instructed to report manipulations of the truth as if they were facts.[23]

TheAustralian Department of External Affairs gave daily guidance to Radio Australia over its Indonesian broadcasts,[24] instructed it on the topics it should report on and the phrases it should use,[22] and often edited the station's programming.[25][27] Radio Australia was instructed to not broadcast disavowals by theCommunist Party (PKI) of responsibility for the attempted coup,[24] and was told, "Radio Australia should not give the impression that the army alone was acting against the PKI. Civilian organisations should be mentioned as often as possible. ... Reports should never imply that the army or its supporters were in any way pro-Western or right wing."[25][24] Radio Australia faithfully followed these guidelines.[24]

The Australian ambassador,Mick Shann, encouraged Radio Australia to report manipulations and misconstructions of the truth in line with requests from theIndonesian Army, and told the station to not compromise the Army's position.[22] He said Radio Australia's broadcasts were "excellent propaganda and of assistance to the anti-PKI forces"[23] and "we must be a bit dishonest for a while."[22][28]

Richard Woolcott explained his guidance to the radio station by saying "Radio Australia should, by careful selection of its news items, not do anything which would be helpful to the PKI and should highlight reports tending to discredit the PKI and show its involvement in the losing cause of the 30th September movement."[25][28][27]

The propaganda encouraged militias and civilians to participate in the slaughter, and justifying the killings through the demonisation of the victims.[22]

Other international ABC services

[edit]

ABC's Asia Pacific television network, as of 2021[update] known asABC Australia, has been broadcasting to the region since 1993.[5]

The ABC has increased itsInternet presence for international audiences; the iviewstreaming service is available via an app, andABC News Online includesChinese-language andTok Pisin articles.[5]

ABC Pacific is the ABC's new digital home for the best Pacific Islands content from across the ABC website since 2022.[5]

ABC Asia is the ABC's new digital home for the best Asian content from across the ABC website since 2023.[5]

See also

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References

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  1. ^"How can I listen to ABC Radio Australia?".ABC Pacific. Retrieved25 November 2022.
  2. ^Ahern, Steve. Making Radio: A Practical Guide to Working in Radio . 2000, Allen & Unwin.ISBN 1-876351-07-1, p. 6
  3. ^abcJolley, Rhonda (11 July 2014).The ABC: an overview (updated) (Report). Research Paper Series, 2014–15. Parliament of Australia, Parliamentary Library.ISSN 2203-5249. Retrieved16 June 2021.PDF
  4. ^Wood, James. History of International Broadcasting. 2000, IET.ISBN 0-85296-920-1, p. 169
  5. ^abcdefgVincent, Michael; Walsh, Michael (16 December 2019)."Australia Calling: A look at 80 years of Radio Australia and ABC international broadcasting".ABC News. Retrieved25 November 2022.
  6. ^Stephanie Zillman (28 February 2017)."ABC boss Michelle Guthrie grilled in Senate Estimates over axing shortwave radio service".www.abc.net.au. Retrieved4 January 2022.
  7. ^Xenephon leads calls for ABC to reinstate shortwave radio
  8. ^ABC short-wave broadcasting to the Pacific
  9. ^"'Australian soft power': A look back at how the ABC once ruled the Asia Pacific's airwaves".ABC News. 16 December 2019. Retrieved27 May 2024.
  10. ^Wood, 2000: 170
  11. ^"Pacifique sans frontières".ABC Radio Australia.Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 2010. Retrieved3 January 2011.
  12. ^transmission schedules of 1973,ff
  13. ^"CBC Radio Overnight".CBC Radio Canada.Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. 2011. Retrieved21 April 2011.
  14. ^Gassin, Timothy (10 July 2012)."Radio Australia returns to Fiji".Media Spy. Archived fromthe original on 15 July 2012. Retrieved25 November 2022.
  15. ^"Latest programs".ABC Radio National. Asia Pacific. Archived fromthe original on 5 December 2009.
  16. ^"About us".Radio Australia. (From "About us" tab on the Asia Pacific page.). Archived fromthe original on 1 December 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  17. ^ab"ABC Radio Australia launches new music show On The Record".About the ABC. 6 July 2023. Retrieved17 September 2023.
  18. ^"AU Review turns ten years old, rebrands".Foldback Media NT. 8 August 2018. Retrieved14 September 2023.
  19. ^Cochran, Tyne (9 November 2020)."A Week in the Life Of... Sosefina Fuamoli".Music Industry Inside Out. Retrieved17 September 2023.
  20. ^"Home".Sosefina Fuamoli. Retrieved17 September 2023.
  21. ^"Sose Fuamoli".ABC. 20 June 2023. Retrieved17 September 2023.
  22. ^abcdeMillott, Marlene (30 September 2015)."Australia's Role in the 1965-66 Communist Massacres in Indonesia".Australian Institute of International Affairs. Retrieved23 September 2020.
  23. ^abcdMillott, Marlene."Accomplice to atrocity?".Inside Indonesia. Retrieved23 September 2020.
  24. ^abcdefEaster, David (1 February 2005)."'Keep the Indonesian Pot Boiling': Western Covert Intervention in Indonesia, October 1965–March 1966".Cold War History.5 (1):55–73.doi:10.1080/1468274042000283144.ISSN 1468-2745.S2CID 153555254. Retrieved23 September 2020.
  25. ^abcdHenry, Adam Hughes (1 January 2014)."Polluting the Waters".Genocide Studies International.8 (2):153–175.doi:10.3138/gsi.8.2.03.ISSN 2291-1847. Retrieved23 September 2020.
  26. ^Sambhi, Natalie (2016)."Neither Truth nor Reconciliation: Why Indonesia's Army Wants the Country to Forget its Darkest Year".World Policy Journal.33 (4):102–109.doi:10.1215/07402775-3813099.ISSN 1936-0924.S2CID 157578677. Retrieved23 September 2020.
  27. ^abHenry, Adam Hughes (2014)."The role of propaganda during the Indonesian massacres".ISAA Review.13 (1):85–105. Retrieved23 September 2020.
  28. ^abTanter, Richard (2013).The Great Killings in Indonesia through the Australian Mass Media / Pembunuhan Massal di Indonesia dalam Tinjauan Media Massa Australia.Kompas Gramedia Group. pp. 129–144.ISBN 978-979-22-9872-7.

Further reading

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External links

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See also
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