Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 19 – Many people
connected with international broadcasting have lamented the passing of
shortwave broadcasting because it means that it is difficult if not impossible
to engage in radio broadcasting to populations except on from stations located
on the territory of the country such stations wish to reach.
That gives the governments of those
countries enormous leverage over what is broadcast because international
broadcasters are likely to restrain from carrying stories that would prompt
those governments to seek to close them down, something that has been true in
the Russian Federation of Vladimir Putin.
But many have assumed that Internet
in general and social media in particular can fill any gap, but that assumption
is misplaced: many who listen to radio or television still do not have access
to that channel or think of using it in the ways they relied on radio in the
past. That is particularly true of older and more rural residents of such
countries.
If the impact of the demise of shortwave
has at least attracted some attention because of its impact on international
broadcasting, the consequences of the end of long-wave broadcasting in the Russian
Federation at the start of this year have not, largely because they are not
viewed as serious or a matter for international concern.
But an article this week by Rimzil
Valeyev, a Kazan media commentator, suggests that may be a serious
mistake. On the one hand and of less interest
perhaps, he notes, many older people who were used to listening to long-wave
broadcasts have simply stopped listening to radio altogether (business-gazeta.ru/article/114134/).
Some of them may turn to television
or the Internet, but neither of those channels carry the same kind of
programming, and thus, the generation in Russia raised on long-wave
broadcasting is being cut off from the kind of news which helped to integrate
them into the larger society.
But on the other hand and of
certainly greater interest, Valeyev writes, Moscow’s ending of long-wave
broadcasting for almost all popular services including those based in the Tatarstan
capital of Kazan mean that broadcasts from there do not reach many of the Tatars
who live dispersed across a broad region and cannot receive Tatar news any
other way.
Although Valeyev does not discuss
it, the same thing is certainly true for other non-Russian groups whose core
population lives within the range of FM broadcasts but whose larger population
is beyond the range of such services. And that means that yet another “technical”
decision by the Russian government will have profound consequences for these
communities.
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