161 lines
8.6 KiB
Plaintext
161 lines
8.6 KiB
Plaintext
RADIO CONTRABANDA F.M. (BARCELONA)
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The airwaves are to the free radio stations what paper is to
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the journals. Without airwaves free radio couldn't broadcast
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and of course, just by chance, this area has always been
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completely monopolised by the State. The State has, in
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every country of the world, seized exclusive control of this
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area and has only just conceded, above all because of
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private initiative within the business world, a part of this
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exclusivity in the form of Users Licences. Not even the
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governments of the left, who currently hold power, have
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deigned to make of the radiophonic medium an area for
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communication and not simply an area of information
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dissemination and other things which has always typified its
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very character. For this reasons the free stations apart from
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demanding freedom of speech, something which we could
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say to a degree we have achieved, also demand the freedom
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to transmit, which entails of course prizing a few crumbs
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from the exclusive control of the airwaves by the State. We
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want a slice, a simple slice so that what the powers that be
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call freedom of expression can become a real possibility.
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The concept of free radio in itself, is already a blow against
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this concept of sovereignty of the State over the air waves
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and the free radios in fact have not demanded legalisation
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but rather the simple recognition of a basic right: the release
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of a section of space on the airwaves.
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One might say that the free radios were born in Paris in
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1978 when the International Federation of Free Radio
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Stations was formed at a meeting of The Association for the
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Liberation of the Airwaves (ALO) and the Federacione de
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Radio Emitenti Democratiche (FRED) which ended up
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being called ALFREDO 78. Many Spanish and Catalan
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comrades were at the meeting which gave rise to the first
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experiences of free Spanish radio in Catalunia in 1978 with
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broadcasts by Ona Lliure first from Santa Maria de Corco
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and since then in Barcelona currently from the Centre Civic
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in the Calle de Blay en Poble Sec, Barcelona. Contrabanda,
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the radio station I work with, has immersed itself in the
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philosophy of free radio. Contrabanda is not a libertarian
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radio station in the strictest sense of the term. At
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Contrabanda there are libertarians but there are also others
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who we might say are vaguely Marxist or people who
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defend ideas of Catalan independence, ecology or feminism.
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Personally I like it that way. I don't share the hangups of
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others and it's a good thing that there should be a wide
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variety of views on a free radio station like ours.
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Contrabanda started running in September 1988 when in
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the course of a meeting of people from differing ideological
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backgrounds, professions and so on it was decided to set up
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a legal Cultural Association with the express intention of
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founding a free radio station. Our first move was to find
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premises, get subscribers to help get some minimal income,
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buy equipment and put into effect a variety of initiatives
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from selling 'solidarity bonds' or outings with food that we
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provided to help raise cash. Another problem from the word
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go was the passing of legislation in December 1988 which
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allowed the minister to go ahead with his plan for a
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complete clean up of existing free stations and pirate
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stations (which put out publicity). The last one to be closed
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down was Radio Pica. After that it became extremely hard
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to even contemplate trying to set something up despite the
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fact that there had been calls from them not least from the
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International Federations which were backing up calls for
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free radio in Spain.. It was all in vain. The new legislation
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simply ended up promoting the interests of the private
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companies and the state sector including military
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communications and so on. Contrabanda, or the group that
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was trying to get it on the road at the time decided that
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there was no point in trying to do things the hard way and
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for that reason it started negotiating with the Generalitat
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(Catalan local govt. trans) and groups within it that might
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listen sympathetically to the demands for freedom to
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broadcast. It was felt that without this softly, softly
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approach it would be impossible to broadcast transmissions
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with an acceptable degree of quality since the prohibition
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was a kind of Damocles sword, ever threatening, and laying
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down the risk of seizure of equipment as had happened to
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Radio Pica and it would not be feasible to transmit at will.
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These negotiations took a long time before giving rise to,
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thanks to a collective petition put together by the radio
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stations and the parliamentary group Esquerra Republicana,
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the introduction in the Catalan parliament of a motion, not a
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law, calling for the recognition of the existence or the right
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to exist for the free stations and that as a result of this the
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government of the Generalitat should set up legally this
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right to exist. Curiously, or perhaps miraculously, this law
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got through. And I say miraculously because in the Basque
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Country a petition for a similar project which was put
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before the Basque parliament by Euskadiko Ezquerra was
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rejected. The Generalitat, seeing itself forced to legislate on
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the matter decided to set up an experimental period for free
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radios until the end of 1990 which was permissible within
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the framework of existing legislation. This is not what the
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free radio stations wanted but they decided to put up with it.
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Anyway, the authorities identified three frequencies which
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would be made available to and could be used by the free
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stations. At the time there were six of us in the metropolitan
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area we split up the allotted frequencies. In January 1991
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Contrabanda FM began transmissions along with Radio Pica
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on 91.0 FM for 24 hours a day. Contrabanda from 3pm to
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3am and Radio Pica the rest. This continued until Radio
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Pica moved to 91.8.
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Contrabanda is a self-managed radio station. We work by
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assembly; the means are collective. The people who make
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the programmes pay to sustain the collective and all those
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who make programmes have a voice and a vote on the
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assembly. As I said earlier Contrabanda is legally speaking a
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Cultural Association and amongst other initiatives we have
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recently set up a Counterinformation Agency. Our
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philosophy could be defined as the cultural melting pot. On
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the one hand we should make it clear that we broadcast in
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Catalan. We believe our language has been monopolised by
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certain sectors of the bourgeoisie which has allowed the two
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to be mistaken for each other. We aim to use the language
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differently not so pure not so grammatically correct but
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giving it other strengths. So our language is Catalan and our
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philosophy that of the free stations that is to say to give a
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voice to those who have no other platform. A number of
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collectives put the programmes together. Some 36 to 40 go
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out 21 of which are internally produced, 9 by outside
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collectives and 6 by individuals. News takes up 31% of
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airtime, culture 14.6%. music programmes 27% and the
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other 26% is non-stop music. The collectives involved are
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indeed varied for example there is a Serbo Croat broadcast
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another called Demanem la Paraula, African Hour - a
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programme put out by women from Guinea - and also the
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Alternative News Agency which is yet another libertarian
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group working in the information field producing two
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weekly slots and with whom Contrabanda works closely on
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an alternative news project. Then their is 'Immigrant
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Viewpoint' made by Magrebine collectives, The MOC
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Programme (Conscientious Objectors), The Red Missile
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(Gay). This is what Contrabanda puts together in order to
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allow for an open space for those collectives and individuals
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who otherwise would have no way of making themselves
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heard. The financing as I have said is partly dealt with by
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'solidarity bonds' paid for by those who are not necessarily
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connected with making programmes. They pay some
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500ptas per month. May I say that the best way to support
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the free radios is to tune in and listen to them in order to
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ensure that there is another means of communication.
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Contrabanda hasn't even been going for three years. The
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first years have been taken up, as is always the case, with
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fine tuning our technical skills and we now consider
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ourselves in good shape both internally and externally.
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We've come out well...
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In another field we've put together special programmes as
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for example during the last general strike from 5am to 10pm
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covering the developments from the doorstep of a
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departmental store! The Working Woman's Day on 8th
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March is another tradition. To finish I would simply like to
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say that we call on you to help us in the ways we have
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described. If we get this support from the people there is no
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reason for us to lose this space we have found as has been
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shown by the experiences of Radio Klara in Valencia and
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others in the Basque Country. We hope one day to
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celebrate our tenth anniversary.
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