Local Radio sending Hope over the airwaves in Haiti
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Jan 25 (IPS) - Throughout the earthquake's aftermath, the voices of many Port-Au-Prince radio stations have been loud and clear.
From Inter Press News Agency Jan. 25 HAITI: Sending Hope over the
Airwaves Ansel Herz PORT-AU-PRINCE, Jan 25 (IPS) - Throughout the
earthquake's aftermath, the voices of many Port-Au-Prince radio
stations have been loud and clear. Radio Solidarite 88.5 FM is one of
the outlets to survive the tremors. It resumed broadcasts from its
small studio, at the top of a two-storey building in the city's centre,
once the staff found some gas for their generator just two days after
the quake. "We have tried to say to the population to be strong, we
appreciate their courage," said Radio Solidarite Director Georges Venel
Remarais. "The international press was talking about violence but we
didn't see any. The help is very slow at times, and people get angry.
Our work is to say, let's be calm." Gas to generate electricity is
still difficult to find, but the Radio Solidarite staff are able to use
their undamaged studio. Radio Metropole, one of Haiti's biggest
stations, also began broadcasting as soon as the staff found gas. Other
than hundreds of records scattered on the floor of its music room, the
facility was not affected. Still, the staff don't feel safe
broadcasting from inside their one-storey compound. "We put our studio
outside," said Jerome Richard, a veteran reporter for the station, "and
we let it be free to the population that can come and say anything they
want to say and information about their lives they want to provide us.
And to let them tell the whole world what's happening in Haiti." The
large staff of Radio Teleginen lost their three-storey building to the
earthquake. The roof collapsed and one of its walls crumbled, leaving a
gaping hole. Volunteers and journalists acting as rescue workers were
unable to retrieve the body of a young cameraman – the station's only
casualty. "We're helping radio Teleginen because we love Radio
Teleginen, we love all its programming and it also serves us," said
Edner Jean as he emerged from the building wearing a hard-hat. "We're
doing our best to pull the person out. We're on our own. Since the
disaster happened, nobody's come to help us." A crane belonging to a
Haitian construction company sits yards away from the rubble, across
from people camped out in hundreds of tents. Jean Borge, the station's
owner, says no one there knows how to operate it. But he's confident
that they'll begin broadcasting within days. "We got a new generator,
we're getting our satellite fixed and will be up and running as soon as
possible," he said. "Our reporters already have started working, we'll
have a small studio here." In the heart of Cite Soleil, Radio Boukman
is on the air. The station is named after the Voodoo priest who helped
ignite Haiti's slave revolt. The remains of a police station are piled
next to their building, but the station itself only lost some equipment
that fell off the shelves. Authorities say they are concerned with
security for aid distributions inside the oceanside shantytown. Edwin
Adrien, a producer for the station, said nobody from the U.N. or United
States contacted them to coordinate aid. "I don't know until now why
they don't contact any entity and especially Radio Boukman,
broadcasting inside Cite Soleil," he said. "I don't know the reason but
they didn't contact us yet. I think the information that we
broadcasting are helping everybody including MINUSTAH and the
population. We have to keep the population informed." Signal FM is
reportedly the only Port-Au-Prince station to remain on the air
throughout the earthquake itself. Mario Viau, the station's director,
told the Committee to Protect Journalists that the station's 12 staff
journalists worked extended shifts to continue broadcasting.
Underlining the importance of Haitian radio, the BBC announced Saturday
it is making its broadcasts available for free, in Haiti's native
Creole, for Haitian radio stations. Port-Au-Prince suffered a 4.7
magnitude aftershock Sunday evening, but parts of the city are gaining
some semblance of normality. The sound of creole songs, hip hop, and
the latest news helps to ease the tension in the city's air. (END/2010)