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27 settembre 2010
In occasione delle recenti
elezioni afghane, Radio Azadi ("libertà")
emittente in pashto promossa dall'organizzazione Radio Free
Europe/Radio Liberty ha organizzato la pacifica distribuzione
di armi di "informazione" di massa: ventimila radioline
con pannellino solare e alimentazione a manovella sono state
regalate alla popolazione di villaggi e campi di rifugiati,
proprio nelle aree sotto la copertura delle emittenti FM che
diffondono le parole di incitamento dei leader della guerriglia
talibana. In queste zone l'analfabetismo raggiunge soglie
del 90% per le donne e 60% per gli uomini e la radio è
uno strumento fondamentale per poter accedere a quel poco
di istruzione, informazione e svago di cui possono disporre
gli abitanti. I programmi di Radio Azadi, sostiene RFE/RL
possono contribuire a contrastare l'azione propagandistica
di "Radio Mullah" offrendo un punto di vista (si
spera) più equilibrato. E comunque meno bellicoso.
*****
RFE, Afghan Air Force Deliver Thousands
Of Radios To Remote Afghan Villages, Refugee C
amps
KABUL, (Afghanistan) On the eve of parliamentary elections
in Afghanistan, RFE's Radio Azadi -- with the help of the
Afghan Air Force and U.S. military -- has launched a new initiative
to help Afghans participate in the democratic process by having
access to reliable news and information.
At a refugee camp outside Kabul yesterday, Radio Azadi staff
began handing out the first of 20,000 solar-powered, hand-cranked
radios to Afghans who live in remote places or lack the means
to access news and information.
More than 2,000 radios were delivered this week to Afghans
in the provinces of Logar, Shamali, Parwan, Kapisa, and Kabul.
Over the next few weeks, the Afghan Air Force will distribute
the remaining radios via Mi-17 helicopters to isolated villages
throughout the rest of the country.
"Many of Afghanistan's displaced persons camps and remote
villages have limited electricity," says RFE President
Jeffrey Gedmin. "These battery-free radios are similar
to the ones distributed in Haiti after the earthquake. Our
objective is to ensure that Afghans everywhere have access
to the kind of reliable information necessary to make important
decisions about their lives."
In the last few years, there has been a proliferation of Taliban-sponsored
radio stations in the region, mainly in the tribal areas along
the Pakistani border. These stations - commonly called "Mullah
Radio" - incite hatred, intolerance, and ethnic violence.
"In Afghanistan, radio equals access," says Matthew
Warshaw, the head of D3 Systems, a leading research firm that
examines Afghanistan's media environment. "If the international
community hopes to have influence on Afghans -- especially
in rural areas where the illiteracy rate is 90 percent for
women and 60 percent for men -- radio will be a large part
of their media strategy."
(radiopassioni.it)
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