VOA to launch new Kano Reporting Center

The Voice of America, which reaches listeners in northern Nigeria through its Hausa language service, is officially launching a new Kano Reporting Center (KRC) in conjunction with a health reporting workshop for women journalists. The KRC, funded through an agreement with the U.S. Agency for International Development’s (USAID) Nigeria mission, is a digital broadcasting facility that allows VOA’s Hausa Service to broadcast a weekly, health-oriented youth radio program, Karamin Sani Kukumi Ne (Little Knowledge is a Danger), from the largest city in the region. Reporters can also file news and information from the KRC with state-of-the-art equipment.

The KRC will be opened officially at a ribbon-cutting ceremony on 16 February. Officials from VOA, USAID and the Kano government are expected to attend. “We’re very excited about this new center, which will help us provide important and timely information about health issues and other topics to our Hausa-speaking audiences,” said David S. Jackson, the VOA director. “We want the KRC to be a beehive of activity – for both broadcasting and training.”

The official opening coincides with a workshop for female journalists focusing on health, including HIV/AIDS, polio, tuberculosis, leprosy, malaria and other epidemics. More than a dozen Nigerian women journalists are participating in the workshop. Doctors and health officials will brief the journalists at the workshop in sessions which will also feature practical advice on issues such as finding the human angle and myths and misconceptions about reporting disease. Among the trainers are Hajia Bilkisu Yusuf, a leading journalist and the president of the Federation of Muslim Women Association in Nigeria; Akin Jimoh, program director for Development Communications Network and Cece Fadope, country coordinator for Internews. Also present will be Sunday Dare, chief of VOA’s Hausa Service.
Under an Inter-Agency Agreement, USAID/Nigeria provided VOA/IBB (through its parent agency, the Broadcasting Board of Governors) $310,000 in FY 2003-2004 to support health and educational programming for VOA’s Hausa service. Besides the KRC, the VOA has conducted reporting on numerous health issues, including HIV/AIDS and polio, and conducted call-in programs and general health forums.

VOA’s Hausa Service, which began in 1979, has a strong presence in northern Nigeria where millions of people listen to the program weekly. Some 50 million people, predominantly in Nigeria but also in Niger, Ghana and Cameroon, speak Hausa. The service broadcasts 90 minutes daily, Monday through Friday, and one-hour on Saturdays and Sundays.

The Voice of America, which first went on the air in 1942, is a multimedia international broadcasting service funded by the U.S. government through the Broadcasting Board of Governors. VOA broadcasts more than 1,000 hours of news, information, educational, and cultural programming every week to an estimated worldwide audience of more than 100 million people. Programs are produced in 44 languages, including English.

Harris upgrades national network for UK’s Chrysalis Radio

Harris Corporation announced on 8 February that Chrysalis Radio, one of the UK’s largest commercial radio networks with more than six million weekly listeners, has migrated its all-E1 star network to a hybrid E1/IP-based MPLS (multi-protocol label switching) platform via an upgrade to its Harris Intraplex CrossConnect Server.

The CrossConnect Server, which combines E1 multiplexing and cross connect capabilities in a single compact unit, improves Chrysalis’ ability to manage critical network traffic between its network hub in London and additional broadcast sites in Leeds, Manchester, Newcastle and Birmingham. The Chrysalis move to hybrid switching reduces transmission costs with the bonus of being able to prioritize radio programming over other IP data.

To achieve this functionality, CrossConnect was upgraded with the Harris Intraplex IntraLink(TM)-IP streaming multiplexer, which manages the encoding and transport of programme audio, voice and data channels over Ethernet networks while ensuring the most efficient use of available transmission capacity. The simple upgrade has the benefit of adding a superior level of flexibility and cost control to the distribution of programme channels within existing LAN, WAN and corporate Intranets.

Bruce Davidson, group technical director, Chrysalis Radio, said, “The goal was not to fix something that wasn’t broken, but to expand and enhance data connectivity within the group. However, since our business is to maintain a broadcast radio network, we had to ensure we didn’t make any changes that could jeopardize our core operation, which is providing uninterrupted, high-quality radio.”

Prior to making the switch to an MPLS platform – designed and provided by UK IT giant THUS – Chrysalis wanted to be certain that the new platform would be fully compatible with existing Harris equipment and retain all current functionality. Extensive tests last year proved that to be the case.

“We did two full days of lab testing and the results were excellent,” said Davidson. “We wanted to link our sites with a flexible, cost-effective, converged system that could be developed to incorporate new technologies, which is precisely what has happened. Now that the upgrade is complete, I’m extremely pleased with the flexibility and robust performance of the Harris system. The transition has been painless and we now have the functionality, reliability and excellent support that give us all the confidence we need to operate 24/7/365.”

Pakistan grants licences for private satellite TV

As the AIB’s Regional Representative for Pakistan and the Middle East, Tariq Bhatty, reports, Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority (PEMRA) recently held a public hearing and granted 8 new satellite television licenses. There are 24 applications pending from cross media companies and they will be considered after cross media restrictions are waved through legislation.

Presently most of the private television stations in Pakistan are broadcasting from outside of Pakistan. 8 companies who are awarded the licences are required to set up the facilities in Pakistan within a certain period of time. This is the first time in the history of Pakistan that private parties are allowed to set up satellite TV stations.

In addition, 21 FM radio licences were awarded. Complete details are available on the PEMRA web site.

NEW CHAIRMAN AT PEMRA
Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority (PEMRA) has appointed Mr. Iftikhar Rashid as the new Chairman. Since the retirement of Mr. Mian Shaib the authority was run my Mr. Noor Dastagir.

GlobeCast launches Authentic TV DTH satellite service on Eurobird

Leading satellite services company GlobeCast announced on 1 February that home shopping channel Authentic TV has signed up to its global distribution network. Specialising in collectables and memorabilia, Authentic TV launches today on BSkyB’s platform, uplinked via Eurobird 28.5°E from GlobeCast’s Brookman’s Park teleport.

The distribution service includes an online content storage and broadcast system which will enable Authentic TV to create and manage its own programming schedules remotely via the internet. The channel records some of its content in the USA but all content, regardless of its source location, can be sent direct to GlobeCast’s secure server via FTP, thus negating the need for traditional satellite backhaul.

Once content is received and stored, Authentic TV’s 24/7 programming schedule is automatically broadcast and uplinked to the Sky Digital platform. The channel will be available on EPG channel 687.

Authentic TV chief executive officer Stephen McCreath said: ‘There were two reasons we chose to launch with GlobeCast. We make decisions based not just on costs and facility standards but also on the individuals who will personally be involved in the management of our business. Although GlobeCast was very competitive on price, we were also very impressed with their management team.’

GlobeCast head of UK channel distribution Juliet Bayliss said: ‘It is exciting to be in at the beginning when a channel such as Authentic TV launches. Our flexibility and range of services mean we can adapt to client’s requirements regardless of their size. We now deliver more than 500 channels worldwide and many of those are looking to expand into new territories. We are well-placed to help them.’

Al-Jazeera is world's fifth top brand

Al-Jazeera has been ranked the fifth most influential brand in the world, behind global icons Apple and Google, in a survey by a worldwide branding consultancy. The Arab news satellite channel had the fifth largest impact on the lives of 1,984 readers of Interbrand’s Brandchannel.com, behind Apple, Google, Ikea and Starbucks.

This year the channel will move further towards the mainstream with the launch in November of an English-language international news channel that will run alongside its Arabic news service and rival CNN and BBC World.