Indonesian Radio Regains Broadcasting License

NTDTelevision 2010-10-13

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In Indonesia, an independent radio station has regained its broadcasting license, after a three year legal battle with communications authorities there. A local affiliate of the Sound of Hope Radio Network, Era Baru FM says the decision by the country's Supreme Court last week is a win for press freedom. It comes after allegations that the Chinese regime had pressured local authorities to shut down the station.

Radio Era Baru can now freely broadcast over the airwaves in Indonesia. The decision by the country's Supreme Court on October 5 ends a three-year legal battle between the station and Indonesian communications authorities.

Radio Era Baru is the local affiliate of Sound of Hope Radio Network. It started broadcasting Chinese-language news in Indonesia in March 2005. Raymond Tan from the station says the Chinese Embassy in Jakarta had tried to shut it down since then. He says the Chinese Embassy sent letters to Indonesian government agencies warning relations would be damaged, unless the station would be shut down. Era Baru says this is because it reports on China-related issues including government corruption, and human rights abuses—like the persecution of Falun Gong and the mistreatment of Tibetans and other minority groups.

In 2007, the Indonesian Ministry of Communications and Information Technology denied the station a broadcasting license. Radio Era Baru was then locked in a legal battle with authorities to regain its right to broadcast. But while court proceedings continued, the Ministry gave Era Baru's airwave frequency to another radio station, known as RSMS, or Sing FM, in September last year.

Last Tuesday, the Indonesia Supreme Court overturned that decision, and gave the airwave frequency back to Radio Era Baru. The station's attorney welcomed the decision.

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