Three radio stations closed indefinitely
Organisation:
Radio Ny Antsika (RNA), Sky FM and Radio Feon'i Toamasina (RFT), three privately-owned radio stations on Madagascar's eastern coast, have been off the air since 10 December 2004. They have been closed by government authorities after broadcasting statements by opposition figures.
Three privately-owned radio stations in the port city of
Toamasina, on Madagascar's eastern coast, have been closed by government
authorities after broadcasting statements by opposition figures. Radio Ny
Antsika (RNA), Sky FM and Radio Feon'i Toamasina (RFT) have been off the air
since 10 December 2004. The stations' management has been summoned to police
headquarters for questioning.
"We believe that the broadcast of this type of interview is merely the
expression of a diversity of opinions which must be allowed to exist in
Madagascar if a free and pluralist information base is to be maintained,"
RSF said in a letter to Telecommunications, Postal and Communications
Minister Bruno Ramaroson Andriantavison. "For this reason, we ask that these
three radio stations be allowed to return to the air immediately and that
RFT's and RNA's transmitters be returned to them by local authorities."
The three stations were reportedly closed for the same reasons: "failure to
obtain an operating licence from the Special Commission on Audiovisual
Communication" and "failure to comply with Article 95 of the 14 September
1992 Ordinance no. 92-03 on Audiovisual Communications". Article 95 deals
specifically with comments deemed to be of a "tribalist" nature. In the
letter to Sky FM ordering the closure of the station, the two opposition
commentators were accused of fomenting unrest by their "tribalist comments".
After listening to the broadcasts in question, the Association of Private
Radio Broadcasters (l'Association des journalistes des radios privées, AJRP)
said that, in their judgement, there was nothing in the content sufficient
to warrant a station's closure. The AJRP also stressed that "confiscation of
(broadcasting) equipment and other assets from a radio station may only take
place if the station has defaulted on payment of a judicially-ordered fine."
The AJRP went on to say that "it is the responsibility of independent and
specialised agencies to order media outlet closures - this should never be
up to the simple, arbitrary will of the executive."
The censoring of the three stations is not an isolated action. In June,
former comminications minister Clermont Gervais Mahazaka ordered the closure
of Radio Say, an independent station known for being outspoken. Such
censorship has particularly damaging repercussions in a country where the
illiteracy rate is high and radio remains the primary source of information.
Published on
Updated on
20.01.2016