<$BlogRSDUrl$>

Saturday, October 04, 2003

Community Radio in India 

I have always been fairly skeptical about various ham-handed attempts to bridge the so-called digital divide, especially using hi-falutin technology. I have maintained that the best way to tackle the situation would be using technologies that carry on the oral tradition, like mobile phones and radio and providing services that correct inefficiencies and/or are income generating. The Washington Post carried a story about how community radio in India has been making a difference, even if the flow of information leaves officials concerned.

India's first independent community radio initiative is in this millet- and tomato-growing village in the southern state of Karnataka. It is a cable radio service because India forbids communities to use the airwaves. A media advocacy group, with the help of U.N. funds, laid cables, sold subsidized radios with cable jacks to villagers and trained young people to run the station.

Since it began broadcasting in March, Our Voices community radio has crackled with the sounds of schoolchildren singing songs and giggling to jokes; of young girls talking fearlessly about the evils of dowry and admonishing boys for teasing them at school; of women giving out recipes and teaching others how to open a bank account; and of farmers debating the vagaries of the weather and fluctuating crop prices.