Radio for Peace International faces eviction

Radio For Peace International (RFPI), which has been operating since 1987 by mutual agreement on the university campus in El Rodeo, Costa Rica, has been served with an eviction notice from the university. The radio station’s access gate was locked with chains and patrolled by armed guards, and the radio station was advised to vacate its facilities in two weeks.

According to General Manager James Latham, the unexplained and legally questionable decision to evict RFPI threatens to silence the voice of peace on international airwaves. “This is more than an eviction, this is about the right to free speech,” he sais.”What is most shocking and sad is that this action comes from an international peace organization.”

University for Peace, a United Nations-mandated university established in 1980, invited RFPI in 1985 to build and manage its own office and studios on the university’s Costa Rica campus. Consequently RFPI constructed studios and transmitters, and has been broadcasting messages of peace and social justice as well as daily United Nations programming. Says James Latham: “Instead of focusing on how to eliminate a fellow peace organization, we need to channel our energy toward eliminating war, poverty and hunger.”

BBC Monitoring strikes oil

OILspace, the global provider of online services for the energy industry, has partnered with BBC Monitoring to enhance the authority and scope of global energy-related news to the 600 international subscribers to OILspace’s OILwatch service. A specially filtered energy feed from BBC Monitoring combined with OILwatch’s current news feeds from Dow Jones newswires, Platts and Reuters now give OILwatch customers unprecedented access to essential energy and geo-political news from around the world. This is the first time that BBC Monitoring Energy News will be made available to such a large commercial audience and is offered to all OILwatch real-time news customers at no extra charge.

News from BBC Monitoring is often faster than from agency feeds, which can put energy professionals in an advantageous position. Local reports of pipeline explosions, rumours of coups, terrorist attacks, strikes or political strife in oil producing countries can cause fluctuations in oil prices and share valuation. Hearing this news more swiftly will enable energy professionals to make more competitive commercial decisions.

“We were impressed at the speed with which BBC Monitoring reports key stories from important oil regions such as the Middle East as they break. We know that our customers will value this additional insight into developments in key oil markets. In the near future we hope to offer OILwatch subscribers access to country specific geo-political news from BBC Monitoring for the analyst and risk management communities,” said Steve Hellman, CEO of OILspace.

Global expansion for Pakistan TV

The Pakistan Television Corporation is shortly to expand its transmission to 157 countries by connecting its two channels to satellite, said Managing Director PTV Akhtar Waqar Azeem.

He also announced a number of developments in Pakistan TV, noting that efforts were being made to enter into an agreement with a foreign network for improving sports reporting with new equipment being purchased for the purpose.

Iran jamming row: Cuba denies it

For some time, the US has been alleging that Cuba is interfering deliberately with transmissions from the United States to Iran.

This brought a vituperative comment from the Cuban Foreign Ministry, saying “We reject this new campaign of defamation against Cuba. Cuba has never engaged in, neither does it engage in carrying out this type of disruption of US satellite television broadcasts.

Cuba, by its own right, has interfered, interferes and it will only continue interfering with the illegal radio and television broadcasts that the US Government airs against our country. We are entitled to do so by our sovereign right to defend our radio-electronic space from the subversive radio and television aggression that, violating international law, the US Government has been carrying out since the first years of the Revolution.”

The affair has since become somewhat more friendly, with an exchange of diplomatic notes, with the US offering technical chapter and verse, and Cuba promising to investigate.

Dubai FM boosts BBC Arabic

BBC World Service has started broadcasting on FM in Dubai, the latest in a network of FM operations in Gulf Co-operation Council States bringing BBC Arabic to its listeners in high quality sound.

The new service follows the launch in July of BBC Arabic’s FM transmission to listeners in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) capital Abu Dhabi on 90.3 MHz.

BBC Arabic is now available to listeners in the Gulf region in Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, as well as in the United Arab Emirates. It can also be heard on FM in Amman, northern Jordan and neighbouring areas, as well as in Khartoum and Wad Madani in Sudan.

BBC Arabic broadcasts news and current affairs programmes to the region as well as several interactive discussion programmes which enable listeners and users of bbcarabic.com to take part in the discussions. BBC Arabic also broadcasts throughout the Arab world on shortwave and medium wave frequencies.