[Rumori] Dutch Gov't Wants to Shutdown Pirate Radio Before It Can be Legalized

David Solomonoff dsolomon at nycap.rr.com
Fri Feb 27 12:04:48 PST 2004


On May 23, The Dutch government auctioned off radio frequencies
to the highest bidders as part of their new Zerobase Radio Frequency
Policy. As a result only the biggest, most commercially and mainstream oriented
stations are able to exploit Dutch radio frequencies for the eight year term of the
licenses. The auction was preceded by "Project Etherflits" in March -- a crackdown on
pirate radio stations which are technically illegal but were previously tolerated. Studio
equipment was confiscated and large fines imposed on the operators. Most stations
have now been forced off the air.

The ZeroBase Policy acknowledges only two kinds of radio: public and commercial.
Any radio formats that don't fit within either of these categories have in effect become
criminal organizations and can never be granted a legal broadcasting permit.

Now the mayor of Amsterdam has granted permission to use police and riot-control
forces to get rid of the country's last remaining Free Radio stations. Radio 100,
 http://www.radio100.nl/_eng/,  Radio Patapoe, http://freeteam.nl/patapoe/ and 
Radio de Vrije Keyser, http://www.vrijekeyser.nl/ are all based in Amsterdam. On 
Monday February 9th the Telecom authorities tried to raid Radio Patapoe. Their attempt
failed because they were unable to locate the transmitting equipment but they promised to return.

The justification for the crackdown has been the prevention of interference with
licensed broadcasters. Ironically the Dutch government was so anxious for space to
be found for additional commercial stations - meaning extra revenue - that interference
between licensed radio stations has become a serious problem in many areas of the
country. Due to poor planning on the part of the government access to existing
transmitters for powerful commercial stations has been allocated very poorly. And
there is a shortage of suitable sites in the Netherlands where broadcast transmitters
can be installed without falling foul of planning and environmental regulations.

But since radio pirates transmit at unused frequencies and without interference (owing
to their limited range) they do not interfere with commercial broadcasters -except to
compete for listeners as Telecom officials admit in the case of Radio Patapoe.

Until 1964 there were no legal commercial radio or television stations in the
Netherlands and the government programming was extremely limited. Free Radio
culture in the Netherlands has played an important role in filling that gap. It remains
innovative, popular and highly valued as an important cultural and political resource.

As result of a huge outcry Dutch Minister of Economic Affairs Laurens-Jan Brinkhorst
has been ordered to investigate easily accessible ways to give permits to local free
frequencies. This widely supported resolution specifically aims to make room for
existing free radios and radio pirates. Yet the phenomenon itself, with its importance to
a healthy democracy, is about to disappear. It will be hard to get back once it's gone.

Radio Patapoe is requesting letters in support of their continued existence which can be used
to make the case for legalization of pirate radio. Letters can be sent to patapoe at freeteam.nl
-- 
David Solomonoff
dsolomon at nycap.rr.com




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