India radio: immunisation, digital SW and the new government

Unicef has collaborated with the Association of Radio Operators of India to hold a first-of-its kind workshop on routine immunisation for radio professionals in Delhi.
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Exchange stories through the Commonwealth Voices project

This year’s Commonwealth Games in Glasgow are fast approaching and we are involved in a project run by BBC Scotland called Commonwealth Voices.

It’s a pop-up internet radio station with studios based in the East End of Glasgow. It will be covering cultural aspects around the Commonwealth Games – that’s stories about Glasgow, Scotland, its people, music, food and history – everything but sport.

The station will be live on air from 1000-1600 every day for a four-week period starting 16 July.

The CBA has created an audio content exchange agreement, and we invite our members to be a part of this project by making either pre-packaged or live audio contributions, in consultation with a BBC producer.

In return, the BBC will provide access and the broadcast rights to 70 x 5-minute Commonwealth Poetry Postcards (spoken word from every country competing in the Games), 30 x 15-minute programmes about Commonwealth countries and background content about Scotland, its history and what’s happening there right now – as well as having access to the material provided by other CBA members around the Commonwealth.

If you’d like your station to be involved, please get in touch with Adam Weatherhead adam@cba.org.uk

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Workshop to discuss digital future of public media for kids

The CBA is to hold a special workshop, Children’s Media at the Core of Public Service Media in a Multiplatform Era, at the World Summit on Media for Children, in Malaysia this September. Continue reading

Zuma’s communications ministry sparks concerns for SABC

Industry experts and opposition figures in South Africa have criticised the government’s decision to group the public broadcaster SABC and state communication bodies into one ministry.

Critics argued that the creation of the new Communications Ministry brought the independence of the South African Broadcasting Corporation into question, it was reported on the local Business Day Live website.

The recently re-elected President, Jacob Zuma, unveiled his new cabinet last week, and said that a new communications ministry would be “formed out of components” including the SABC, Brand SA, the Media Development and Diversity Agency, and the Government Communications and Information System. The ministry would be responsible for communication strategy and the “branding of the country abroad”.

The new ministry would also include the Independent Communications Authority of South Africa. The reconfiguration has also resulted in the creation of a separate Minstry of Telecommunications and Postal Services, which means that oversight of mobile and broadcasting infrastructure will fall under different departments.

Sekoetlane Jacob Phamodi, Co-ordinator of the South African lobby group SOS: Support Public Broadcasting, said in BD Live, that the organisation was “astonished” at the decision that was a blow to the sector especially at a time when “we need to be moving to a converged ICT environment.”

Right2Know, a media freedom campaign group in South Africa, aired its concerns around the new ministry’s task to draft policies on broadcast and transform print media, in a statement it said: “These are both long overdue interventions that should be aimed at diversifying the media landscape and ensuring the sustainability of public and community media.

“These sensitive regulatory processes must be undertaken to advance freedom of expression and press freedom in particular,” it continued. “[But] they are now in the hands of a minister with a mandate to ensure that government’s ‘good story’ gets told.”

Murray Hunter, the group’s national spokesman said in BD Live: “This ministry will pull in two different directions. I sense the design of this ministry will make its functions that much harder.”

A spokesman from the ANC, the party in government, Keith Khoza, said the mass media was merely a platform in the ongoing “battle of ideas” in South Africa. “The battle of ideas is about public debate, in fact.

“This is debate about public policy and other matters, he told BD Live. “The ANC, like any political organisation in the public domain, seeks to influence public opinion, so we are unapologetic about that because it is part of the battle of ideas.”

He added that the constitution protected the independence of the SABC.

The Shadow Minister of Communications, from the Democratic Alliance Party, Marian Shinn, said in BD Live last week that the reconfiguration showed that the ANC “conflates communication content and communications infrastructure.”

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Radio New Zealand CEO: we need to prioritise digital offering

The CEO of Radio New Zealand, Paul Thompson, got the CBA Conference off to a sobering but also inspiring start with a presentation on the decline of radio and the opportunities of digital disruption. Continue reading

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Namibian broadcaster busts myths on Africa, digital & China

The head of NBC, Namibia’s national broadcaster, gave a spirited keynote address at the CBA Conference. Albertus Aochamub debunked a number of myths about digital transition in Africa, talked about why radio is still the “killer application”, described the state of play with China and why and how African countries will need to learn to work with them. Continue reading

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Thanks for helping us hit the right note at the Conference

Well over 100 delegates from around the world gathered for the 30th CBA Conference at BBC Scotland in Glasgow. Thanks again to everyone for making it a lively and discursive event. See our Flickr page for a pick of the pics. Continue reading

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CBA members vote to become the Public Media Alliance

At the CBA Conference on 13 May in Glasgow, members at the AGM unanimously carried special resolutions that enable the organisation to broaden its global focus, and become the Public Media Alliance. Continue reading

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See the Guardian and CBA WorldView Bangladesh interactive

CBA’s WorldView is proud to have partnered with the Guardian to produce a groundbreaking new media project to coincide with the first anniversary of the collapse of the Rana Plaza garment factory in Bangladesh, where over 1,000 people died.

Watch the interactive documentary on the WorldView website >>

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Meet our globetrotting broadcasters

We’re pleased to announce the names and projects of the eight broadcasters who have received this year’s CBA Travel Bursaries. Continue reading

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