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THE INFORMATION IN THIS ARTICLE IS FREE. It may be copied, distributed
and/or modified under the conditions set down in the Design Science License
published by Michael Stutz at http://dsl.org/copyleft/dsl.txt

Today's Topics:

   1. Again Cuba (Bollin)
   2. Se actualizo nuevamente www.elmundodelaradio.com (Arnaldo)
   3. LV de Guaviare (Dave Valko)
   4. Azerbaiy?n: video del cierre de Radio Azadliq
      (JOSE MIGUEL ROMERO ROMERO)
   5. logs (L?cio Ot?vio)
   6. Ethiopia: Country Liberalises Radio And Television May Follow
      (Zacharias Liangas )
   7. USA: WMVB 1440 AM comenz? a emitir en espa?ol el 1 de enero
      en Cumberland. (JOSE MIGUEL ROMERO ROMERO)
   8. Congo 6115 (Jari Savolainen)
   9. Addy for Voice of Africa ([email protected])
  10. Recent QSLs (Bill Harms)
  11. Re: interesting log: 535 (Glenn Hauser)
  12. 5815 Radio Al Aqsa. (JOSE MIGUEL ROMERO ROMERO)
  13. Aqsa ? (Zacharias)
  14. COREXION : Aqsa ?  5815 (Zacharias)
  15. COREXION : Aqsa ?  5815 (Zacharias)
  16. Al Aqsa TV & Radio Crew Abducted by Fatah " Security
      Services" in Tulkarem. (JOSE MIGUEL ROMERO ROMERO)
  17. Ataques a la television Al-Aqsa (JOSE MIGUEL ROMERO ROMERO)
  18. Francia proh?be las emisiones del canal de Hamas "Al Aqsa TV"
      (JOSE MIGUEL ROMERO ROMERO)
  19. African Logs ([email protected])


----------------------------------------------------------------------

Message: 1
Date: Fri, 9 Jan 2009 09:54:03 +0100
From: Bollin <[email protected]>
Subject: [HCDX] Again Cuba
To: HCDX <[email protected]>
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-15

Hi
has  anybody  got  a  qsl  from  these station? If yes, who was vs or
address for writing to. All my reports ""got lost" .


I seek some working email address for  the following Cuban stations
Radio CMHW Doblev?      840khz
Radio Ciudad Banderas  1140khz
RC del Mar             1350khz

The emails on the websides didn_t work


vy 73
Abo



------------------------------

Message: 2
Date: Fri, 9 Jan 2009 06:51:31 -0300
From: "Arnaldo" <[email protected]>
Subject: [HCDX] Se actualizo nuevamente www.elmundodelaradio.com
To: "Christian Bravo de Laguna" <[email protected]>
Cc: Jaime Baguena <[email protected]>, Carlos Felipe
        <[email protected]>,   [email protected],
        [email protected],      Nysnet <[email protected]>,
        [email protected],  NoticiasDX
        <[email protected]>, [email protected], Domesticas Y
        Tropicales <[email protected]>,
        [email protected], [email protected],    playdx2003
        <[email protected]>, DXLD <[email protected]>, Mois?s
        Knochen <[email protected]>,     [email protected]
Message-ID: <002201c9723f$edd316b0$25f47...@arnaldo>
Content-Type: text/plain;       charset="iso-8859-1"

Se actualiz? nuevamente la informaci?n en la p?gina web www.elmundodelaradio.com

Con el comienzo del nuevo a?o se relanz? la p?gina web 
www.elmundodelaradio.com

La misma cuenta con un nuevo dise?o a trav?s del cual los visitantes podr?n 
obtener informaci?n actualizada sobre la radio en particular y los medios de 
comunicaci?n en general. Asimismo, se pondr? un especial ?nfasis en las 
nuevas tecnolog?as e Internet.

Adem?s, la web desarrollar? un ?rea de informaciones vinculada especialmente 
a las carreras del ?rea de comunicaci?n social, locuci?n,  periodismo y 
afines a la radio en general.

Nuestro sitio a?n est? en una etapa experimental por lo cual nuestros 
visitantes podr?n encontrar una permanente renovaci?n e incorporaci?n de 
nuevos servicios y v?nculos. Los invitamos a visitarlo y a comunicarse con 
nosotros enviando sus cr?ticas, sugerencias y comentarios a 
[email protected]

Christian Bravo de Laguna

Arnaldo Leonel Slaen

------------------------------

Message: 3
Date: Fri, 9 Jan 2009 09:02:26 -0500
From: "Dave Valko" <[email protected]>
Subject: [HCDX] LV de Guaviare
To: <[email protected]>, <[email protected]>, <[email protected]>,
        <[email protected]>, <[email protected]>,
        <[email protected]>, "Guy Atkins" <[email protected]>,       "Nicolas
        Eramo" <[email protected]>
Message-ID: <03598f2d00834709943b4ce2e513b...@davepc>
Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; charset="iso-8859-1";
        reply-type=original


COLOMBIA   6035  LV de Guaviare  1150-1250  Apparent nx/press pgm w/M anncr 
hosting and many many actualities.  After 1200, there were more ad blocks 
than nx.  Canned ID at 1159, 4+1 long time ticks 31 seconds slow.  ID at end 
of prob. promo at 1205.  Another ID during M and W dialog in ad at 1206, 
then another at 1207.   Ments of Colombia and "radio de Colombia" during 
ads.  Pgm promo for "Camposina Buenos Dias" at 1227.  Still a little 
readable after 1230 w/coo-coo clock SFX in ad during ad block at 1232.  Just 
abt gone by 1250 but could still hear the M anncr.  Seemed more readable 
after 1200 than before.  Interesting that at 1250, it's a complete daylight 
path from Guaviare to PA, and well in daylight, around 1:45 after sunrise, 
at the xmtr.  (9 Jan.)

73               Dave 



------------------------------

Message: 4
Date: Fri, 9 Jan 2009 14:40:02 +0000 (GMT)
From: JOSE MIGUEL ROMERO ROMERO <[email protected]>
Subject: [HCDX] Azerbaiy?n: video del cierre de Radio Azadliq
To: Frecuencia DX <[email protected]>
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8

Azerbaiy?n: Proh?ben emisiones radiales extranjeras antes del refer?ndum 
constitucional


http://es.globalvoicesonline.org/2009/01/08/azerbaiyan-prohiben-emisiones-extranjeras-antes-del-referendum-constitucional/

Mientras el pa?s se preparaba para recibir el A?o Nuevo, el Consejo Nacional 
para la Televisi?n y Radio de Azerbaiy?n prohib?a a las estaciones 
internacionales de radio emitir en las frecuencias nacionales. La decisi?n se 
hizo efectiva a partir del 1 de enero del 2009 y afect? a tres estaciones de 
radio que emit?an en la frecuencia FM ? VOA, BBC y el servicio azer? de Radio 
Free Europe/Radio Liberty, Azadliq (Libertad).

En una regi?n donde el estricto control del gobierno define a los medios, la 
prohibici?n fue vista por algunos como un ataque a los ?ltimos remanentes de la 
libre expresi?n en Azerbaiy?n.

En particular, la prohibici?n referida a Azadliq se encontr? con la 
desaprobaci?n del segmento pol?ticamente activo de la sociedad. Casi a la vez, 
otra decisi?n desde el parlamento aprob? un refer?ndum que se llevar? a cabo el 
18 de marzo para levantar la restricci?n de dos t?rminos presidenciales que hay 
en la Constituci?n. Mientras que el refer?ndum encontr? peque?as protestas 
dentro y fuera de Azerbaiy?n, la prohibici?n a las radios extranjeras qued? 
perdida en su mayor parte entre muchas de las festividades de A?o Nuevo.

Aun as?, cierta reacci?n est? empezando a aparecer.

S?z?n D?z? [az], por ejemplo, publica un video de YouTube donde un grupo de 
j?venes azeries celebra el A?o Nuevo en solidaridad con el personal de la 
estaci?n en los ?ltimos minutos de Azadliq. Uno de los j?venes entrevistados en 
el video dice que ha ido para compartir la pena de la estaci?n de radio 
mientras que otro comenta que ?pueden cerrar Azadliq, pero la Libertad vendr? 
con seguridad a este pa?s?.

Pero, mientras el gobierno responde al clamor internacional acerca de la movida 
y sigue afirmando que la audiencia puede seguir recibiendo las emisiones en 
frecuencias de onda corta, un blogger, Tabula Rasa [ru], escribe que ?ellos 
callan voces alternativas? y pregunta ??por qu? ahora?? El blogger brinda tres 
respuestas hipot?ticas a su propia pregunta.

    (1) El gobierno se prepara para capitular una paz sobre Nagorno-Karabakh;

    (2) Quieren realizar el refer?ndum sin ning?n problema;

    (3) Como el precio del petr?leo ha ca?do cuatro veces, la econom?a est? en 
una mala condici?n, y por lo tanto el gobierno trata de evitar cualquier 
posible despertar en la mente del pueblo.

Mientras tanto, m?ltiples grupos de Facebook se han iniciado en apoyo a Radio 
Liberty, VOA y la BBC en Azerbaiy?n. Uno de estos grupos, que al momento de 
escribir esto tiene 768 miembros, es Support Radio Liberty, VOA and BBC in 
Azerbaijan!!! [en]. Tambi?n se ha iniciado una petici?n en l?nea en su apoyo 
ac?.


      



------------------------------

Message: 5
Date: Fri, 9 Jan 2009 13:36:47 -0200
From: L?cio Ot?vio <[email protected]>
Subject: [HCDX] logs
To: <[email protected]>, <[email protected]>,
        <[email protected]>, <[email protected]>,
        <[email protected]>, <[email protected]>,
        <[email protected]>, <[email protected]>,     "Anker Petersen"
        <[email protected]>
Message-ID: <011f01c97270$5d57d270$f7f06...@home>
Content-Type: text/plain;       charset="iso-8859-1"

5915, Zambia NBC Radio, Luzaka. January-08 Vern. 0417-0427 OM on music, tribal 
music, 0420 YL talks, 0424 tribal music. 33333 (lob-B).

4770, R. Nigeria, Kaduna. January-08 EE 0540 repetitive tribal music, OM short 
talks returning music, 0545 guitar Jazz as bridge to YL segment, male and 
female alternating till 0600. CODAR QRM 22322 (lob-B).

73's

L?cio Ot?vio Bobrowiec

Embu SP Brasil - Sony ICF SW40 - dipole 18m, 32m. 

------------------------------

Message: 6
Date: Fri, 09 Jan 2009 19:15:29 +0200
From: "Zacharias Liangas " <[email protected]>
Subject: [HCDX] Ethiopia: Country Liberalises Radio And Television May
        Follow
To: <>
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

Ethiopia: Country Liberalises Radio And Television May Follow, Supports 
Thriving Local Film Culture

Russell Southwood
http://allafrica.com/stories/printable/200901080648.html

8 January 2009

London - The Ethiopian Government is best known for the tight control it has 
exerted over the political process of the country.

Therefore it comes of something of a surprise to learn that it has made the 
development of media a priority and with a certain amount of external 
prompting has liberalised the radio sector. Two new private radio stations 
have been launched (more will follow) and community radio stations have 
also started broadcasting. Well-informed sources say that there will be a 
new private free-to-air television channel within two years. Against this 
backdrop, the country is also sustaining a significant local film culture in 
Amharic.

Based on figures from the last census, there are probably between 1-2 
million television sets and around 8 million radio sets in Ethiopia.

The Ethiopian Radio and TV Agency has overall responsibility for the state 
run channels but radio and TV have their own organisation and 
management. ETV is completely supported by Government money and 
advertising. There is no licence fee. Two channels: ETV1 which carries ads 
and ETV 2 which does not. ETV1 covers about 47% of the population 
whereas ETV2 covers only the capital Addis Ababa. The programming 
schedule is built around new bulletins throughout the day. Each channel 
shows around 16 hours programming a day.

The majority of programming is in Ethiopia's most widely spoken language 
Amharic and the majority of programmes are made by ETV which has its 
own studios. A standard quality 20 minute programme would cost between 
50-70,000 birr an hour. There is a small independent production sector but it 
has little chance of growing in current circumstances.

Advertising is very cheap at around 1,000 birr a minute. The main 
advertisers are cleaning products and government organisations like the 
Anti-Corruption Agency. As the country still has a monopoly phone company 
(ETC), there is not the volume of mobile phone advertising found in other 
African countries. That said, ETV has been able to buy some of the premium 
sports rights by attracting sponsors.

The transition to DTT is at an early stage as there is no plan from the 
Government specifying when and how it will happen. The Ethiopian 
Broadcasting Authority has done a study which has been submitted to the 
Government, which needs to create a Task Force to tackle the when, how 
and what technology issues. Given the overall approach of the Government 
in other fields, it is likely to opt for a planned approach. However, the issue 
of subsidy will require considerable resourcing.

ETV has made some progress in digitalising its production processes and 
parts of its archive. For although the Government has declared that the 
development of the media is a priority, there is a shortage of professional 
people and resources. Furthermore, ETV as state media is very clearly 
tasked by the Government to help promote its policies and the 
implementation of its strategies and that does not always make for 
interesting viewing.

There are two Pay TV companies - GTV and Multichoice - who between 
them probably have between 6-7,000 subscribers, 75-80% of whom are in 
the capital Addis Ababa.

Community radio development is being funded by a combination of the 
World Bank (US$18 m), the Ethiopian Government (US$5 million) and GTZ 
(US$3 million). The regulator, Ethiopian Broadcasting Authority, has two 
ways of defining community radio: either by geographic region (with a range 
of up to 25 kms) and/or addressing a particular community (young people, 
women or the disabled). 5 community radio licences have been issued by 
the regulator EBA.

One of the country's universities runs a radio station in partnership with an 
international NGO with a 3 KW transmitter with an 80 mile radius. Makele 
University in Tigray is developing locally produced antennas and 
transmitters.

One of the conditions of World Bank funding was that the Government start 
offering private commercial licences. There are currently two private FM 
radio stations (Sheger FM on 107.3 and Zami on 90.7) and a third radio 
station focusing on English and French programming (Afro FM) will be 
launched next year. In addition, there are two Government radio stations and 
Radio Fana (see below). However, there is a considerable thirst to launch 
stations as there were over 45 applicants for the current round of licences. 
Critics of the liberalisation say that too few stations have been licensed and 
that they are all in the capital, Addis Ababa.

One of the most dynamic of the new private sector radio players is in fact an 
already existing station, Radio Fana. It came out of the military struggle 
against the Dergue and had its origins as a clandestine radio station in the 
bush. As a result, it has remained broadcasting after the current 
Government came to power. It broadcasts in Amharic, Afar, Oromo and 
Somali and is expanding its number of stations, launching new transmitters 
in Jimma in the south and Gonder in the north. It transits on FM in the urban 
area and on short wave in the rural areas. In the next two years it will have 
10 stations with increased local programming. All together the company 
employs 254 people and before too long it will move from its current "hut-
like" premises to a new multi-storey office block it is building next door to 
its 
current offices.

It is supported by three different kinds of advertising: conventional 
advertising, mainly on the FM stations (30% of revenue), programme 
sponsorships (15%) and programme partnerships where an organisation will 
fund a programme. The latter category includes Government Ministries and 
international donors like UNICEF and Save the Children. Programmes 
include community discussions on health and sanitation issues and talk 
shows in the urban areas.

Advertising rates vary between 10,000 birr for three spots in an hour for 
programme sponsorship to six thirty second spots for 690 birr for a more 
conventional national ad on a premium programme. There are reductions for 
the three non-Amharic languages. Advertising for non-commercial 
organisations goes as low as 35-40 birr a minute.

The losers in the struggle for radio advertising have been the Government 
radio stations. Whereas they used to have a 40%+ market share with Radio 
Fana taking the lion's share, they are now down to 18-20%. Radio Fana has 
more or less kept its market share with Sheger taking 25%. Radio Fana 
takes a very bullish view of competition, believing that it helps them sharpen 
up the delivery of everything they do and grows the market.

Radio Fana would clearly be one of the contenders for a free-to-air TV 
licence as and when the Government puts one on the table. Well-informed 
sources told us that it's "in the pipeline". New elections are only 18 months 
away and the decision could be taken after the elections.

Ethiopia has a large and thriving film culture which is unusual given the 
history of cinema in the country. Emperor Menelik II was in conversation with 
Stevenin when the latter mentioned cinema and how he had abandoned 
importing a projector because of opposition from the country's priests. The 
original cinema was opened by a Frenchman and was quickly dubbed Satan 
Bet' (The devil's house) by the public. The cinema went bankrupt and its 
projector passed to the Emperor who used it to watch films with a spiritual 
theme with his officials and priests in the Grand Palace. It was not until 
"talkies" came into being that cinema really took off in Ethiopia.

Addis Ababa has ten cinemas where many African capitals only support one 
or two venues. Of these, four are privately owned and the rest are 
Government-run venues. The smartest of these cinemas is in the Edina Mall 
and was built by a local millionaire a year ago. Outside of Addis Ababa, films 
get shown in big general-purpose halls. There is a strong audience for 
locally made films and almost all screenings are crowded, often requiring a 
police presence for crowd control. Interestingly, people pay a premium to 
see local films: 15 birr (US$1.53) for a locally made film as against 5 birr 
(US30 cents) for seeing two Hollywood movies.

The Ethiopian International Film Festival takes place in the country's capital 
Addis Ababa at the end of November each year. In 2008 it showed 24 
Ethiopian films and 28 African and international films: the Ethiopian films 
shown are all competition entries. Its director Yergity Teshome is promising 
that this year's festival will be even bigger than last year's and he wants to 
do a pre-festival training workshop for 10 people, 3 of whose short films (of 
between 5-7 minutes) will be shown at the Festival.

Last year 33 feature films were made in Ethiopia by independent 
filmmakers, all shot on Betacam HD and in country's most widely spoken 
language Amharic. Because they are in Amharic, they tend only to be shown 
in Ethiopia or to the diaspora in Europe and North America. Ethiopians have 
their own popular music which is widely used in the films made but no-one 
really knows this music outside the country.

According to Teshome:"Our neighbours like Kenyans and Ugandans don't 
know Ethiopian music and Ethiopians are not globalised in a cultural sense." 
Recent entries to the film festival have been shown at the Amakula Film 
Festival in Kampala and at ZIFF in Zanzibar and on the international festival 
circuit but this has bought critical acclaim but not audiences.

Prize-winning entries to last year's Ethiopian International Film Festival give 
some idea of the types of stories involved. Operation Agazi is an action 
movie that looks at a jailbreak mounted during the Dergue regime to release 
political prisoners. Best Man is a comedy about two couples: one male 
partner wants to marry, the other does not. The rise of the current film sector 
dates back to the end of the Dergue regime and probably one of the first 
films to be made was Aster. After the collapse of the regime, the film sector 
simply blossomed.

The budget needed to make films is raised from box office revenues or initial 
capital is loaned by the families of film-makers. Most of the film makers are 
very young and the industry is not, according to Teshome, either 
"institutionalised or industrialised." But as he acknowledges for the sector to 
become more sustainable, a system needs to be built and one with its own 
institutions. The country has its own film stars but each needs to make 
several films at once to survive and they supplement their income with TV 
and radio ads.

In revenue terms, filmmakers rent cinemas (that range from 700-1,500 
seats) for around 3,500 birr and sell tickets for 15 birr per person. On this 
basis, the filmmaker can get around 50,000 birr (US$5,100) or more 
revenue from a film. Some films are high budget and one has run to 3.5 
million birr. The maker of this particular film was the person who launched 
one of Ethiopia's first ad agencies and is a prolific film-maker. In terms of 
post-production, there are no facilities houses and each individual film-
maker makes their own edit. However, the volume of films being made has 
seen camera hire go from 100 birr a day to 700 birr a day.

After the film has been shown at the cinema, it will then be distributed on 
VCD by local distributors but this raises very little money as copies are 
almost immediately pirated. However, what income does get made is split 
50/50 between the distributor and the film-maker. Again renting local films 
commands a premium: it costs only 2 birr to rent a Hollywood movie for 
three days but 5 birr to rent a local movie for one day.

Films are not screened on television. The only explanation is that ETV is 
state-owned. For as Teshome sees it:"That's our big problem. They don't 
want to give air-time to a private person. ETV has its own dramas but they're 
not very good."

Some of the difficulties with the uncertain relationship between independent 
producers and ETV is illustrated by the recent changes in access to the 
channel.

Wizzkids Workshop is a small company supported by donor commissions. It 
produced four 7 minute animation features on childrens' health, the 
environment and recycling water. ETV agreed to show them for 300 birr 
(US$30.64) a minute.

But buying airtime is now no longer possible because of two factors. Firstly, 
inspired by the Government's anti-corruption approach ETV is now 
commissioning programmes one year ahead and not allowing programme 
makers to share advertising income. Secondly, there is a new bill covering 
CSOs which says that only local organisations can address issues of rights. 
To be an Ethiopian NGO defined as local you must get 90% of your funding 
from Ethiopian sources. Programme makers have to bid to make 
programmes and this means this type of programming may no longer be 
aired.

UNESCO has organised a film and development workshop as part of the 
Ethiopian International Film Festival looking at how development issues can 
be incorporated into films. Paul Hector of UNESCO says:"We'd like to do the 
equivalent of product placement where an issue becomes part of the plot." 
He is also trying to organise an event this year involving the Ethiopian 
diaspora that would involve them in making productions.

There's a film school at Addis Ababa University but according to one source 
it's of a fairly low standard because many of those teaching the subject do 
not have a wide experience of film-making. In addition, there are three 
private film-making schools, one of which is a complex run by the company 
that owns Radio Fana.

Please read and distribute this 15 year research article 
http://tinyurl.com/5vzg7e 

Please read my article on SINPO at http://tinyurl.com/yt7qjd
________________________
http://www.google.com/reader/shared/06600224598981072865
http://zliangas.blogspot.com  (radio tech , gadgets, grk ethics)
http://zlgr.stumbleupon.com  (my social 'bookmarks' )
http://zlgr.multiply.com (radio monitoring site plus audio clips ) MAIN SITE 
http://www.youtube.com/zach0gr     some videos 
http://www.worldisround.com/articles/302315/ (Litohoro) 321199/Tinos 
http://www.flickr.com/photos/zachgr    pictures upload 
http://www.geocities.com/zliangas
http://www.myspace.com/310100806
http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=770974854
http://del.icio.us/gr_geek1
........
Zacharias Liangas , Thessaloniki Greece 
greekdx @ otenet dot gr  ---  
Pesawat penerima: ICOM R75 , Lowe HF150 , Degen 1102,1103,108,
Tecsun PL200/550, Chibo c300/c979, Yupi 7000 
Antenna: 16m hor, 2x16 m V invert, 1m australian loop 



------------------------------

Message: 7
Date: Fri, 9 Jan 2009 17:26:17 +0000 (GMT)
From: JOSE MIGUEL ROMERO ROMERO <[email protected]>
Subject: [HCDX] USA: WMVB 1440 AM comenz? a emitir en espa?ol el 1 de
        enero en Cumberland.
To: Frecuencia DX <[email protected]>
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8

Radio local sue?a al ?xito en espa?ol

http://www.thedailyjournal.com/article/20090109/NC01/90108036

VINELAND ? La estaci?n de radio WMVB 1440 AM comenz? a transmitir en espa?ol 
para captar a la creciente audiencia hispana del condado de Cumberland.
?Vamos a hacer radio durante todo el d?a con programaci?n enfocada a la 
comunidad mexicana, centroamericana, caribe?a y sudamericana que viven en esta 
zona?, coment? Efra?n Mu?iz, responsable de la nueva emisora que acord? 
contrato con Quinn Broadcasting Inc., corporaci?n propietaria de esta estaci?n 
y tambi?n del Canal 2 QBC de televisi?n y de WSNJ 1240 AM de Millville.


Desde el 1? de enero, la 1440 AM se llama Radio ?xito y los productores est?n 
trabajando para armar la grilla de programaci?n de la semana radial, cont? 
Mu?iz. 

?De lunes a viernes planeamos tener pura programaci?n local, los s?bados 
seguramente alternaremos con programaci?n del Caribe y los domingos venderemos 
el tiempo para las iglesias?.

Mu?iz comenz? a trabajar en radio en la 1270 AM de Vineland hace siete a?os, 
luego tuvo programas en la 1440 AM, durante tres a?os particip? en la 1540 AM 
de Bala Cynwid en Pennsylvania y en el 2007 pas? Radio ?xito a la 1680 AM en 
Philadelphia.

?Estamos buscando locutores y gente para nuestro departamento de ventas?, 
agreg? Mu?iz en entrevista telef?nica con esta redacci?n mientras alternaba 
salidas al aire.



Originally published January 9, 2009



      



------------------------------

Message: 8
Date: Fri, 9 Jan 2009 21:02:49 +0200
From: "Jari Savolainen" <[email protected]>
Subject: [HCDX] Congo 6115
To: <[email protected]>, <[email protected]>
Cc: [email protected]
Message-ID: <004701c9728c$e0fdff20$11000...@js1>
Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; charset="iso-8859-1";
        reply-type=original

On 9 Jan at 1820 noted on 6115 a station in Afro-French with
talks about Congo. Audio was switching from good to real poor.
Around 1849 I guess there was "Radio Congo" id and then
the signal went off. Maybe Brazzaville firing up a transmitter again.
Jari Savolainen
Kuusankoski
Finland


------------------------------

Message: 9
Date: Fri, 09 Jan 2009 14:16:51 -0500
From: [email protected]
Subject: [HCDX] Addy for Voice of Africa
To: [email protected]
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"


Mr. Combs;

I sent a report to Voice of Africa using the following address.


English Service
Voice of Africa
P. O. Box 4677
Soug al Jama
Tripoli
Libya


They responded in about eight weeks with a package of literature, a couple of 
post cards, a blank report form, but no QSL. The package had really nice stamps 
on it. 

73
Joe Wood
Greenback, TN, USA




------------------------------

Message: 10
Date: Fri, 09 Jan 2009 14:47:42 -0500
From: Bill Harms <[email protected]>
Subject: [HCDX] Recent QSLs
To: [email protected], [email protected]
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed

MOLDOVA - PRIDNESTROVYA: Family Radio 6240 via Griogoriopol. f/d 30th 
anniversary card in 12 days via Oakland, CA. Annotation on card reads 
"Relay: Russian Broadcasting Company: "Radioagency - M" via ftp 
Griogoriopol." (Harms-MD)

MADAGASCAR: Family Radio 7395 via Talata-Volondry. f/d 30th Anniversary 
card in 13 days via Oakland, CA. Annotation on card reads "Relay: RN, 
Madagascar via Satellite." (Harms-MD)

USA: WCBQ 7415 f/d "The Planet" Logo card in 10 days for $1. v/s Allan 
H. Weiner. (Harms-MD)

CZECH REPUBLIC: Radio Prague 6200 via Litomysl. f/d "Brno - Cathedral of 
Sts. Peter and Paul, South Moravia" card in 8 days via web site form at 
http://www.radio.cz/en/report (Harms-MD)

SWEDEN: Radio Sweden 1179 via Soelvesborg. f/d Stockholm City Hall card 
in 6 days via web site form http://radiosweden.org/qsl1.phtml v/s 
illegible. (Harms-MD)

Bill Harms
Elkridge, Maryland, USA


------------------------------

Message: 11
Date: Fri, 9 Jan 2009 11:56:16 -0800 (PST)
From: Glenn Hauser <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [HCDX] interesting log: 535
To: [email protected]
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

CBK Saskatchewan with CBC Overnight relaying RN and other stations, really on 
540. Check your receiver readout. 73, Glenn Hauser

--- On Thu, 1/8/09, Robbie j. <[email protected]> wrote:

> From: Robbie j. <[email protected]>
> Subject: [HCDX] interesting log
> To: [email protected]
> Date: Thursday, January 8, 2009, 1:02 PM

> Hey All, On 01\04\09 I got radio netherlands on 535
> khz at 07:15 utc! Don`t know if it was a cbc relay or
> something else. Had a good sig. though here into south west
> wyo. They were talking about internat. news in english. Good
> dx to all, Robbie in south wyoming



      


------------------------------

Message: 12
Date: Fri, 9 Jan 2009 20:08:24 +0000 (GMT)
From: JOSE MIGUEL ROMERO ROMERO <[email protected]>
Subject: [HCDX] 5815 Radio Al Aqsa.
To: Frecuencia DX <[email protected]>
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1

   Saludos cordiales.

5815 Radio Al Aqsa, 20:03-20:14, escuchada el 9 de enero en ?rabe a locutor con 
comentarios, emisora de origen desconocido, gracias al colega egipcio Zeidan 
Tarek que ha conseguido identificarla, SINPO 22332

Jos? Miguel Romero
Burjasot (Valencia)
Espa?a

Sangean ATS 909
Antena Radio Master A-108



      



------------------------------

Message: 13
Date: Fri, 09 Jan 2009 22:35:49 +0200
From: Zacharias <[email protected]>
Subject: [HCDX] Aqsa ?
To: HCDX <[email protected]>, CDX
        <[email protected]>
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed

I dont know if this is Aqsa but on 2032 there were drums play then  
Arabic folk  songs
A signal  of S7 here , 34343


------------------------------

Message: 14
Date: Fri, 09 Jan 2009 22:37:03 +0200
From: Zacharias <[email protected]>
Subject: [HCDX] COREXION : Aqsa ?  5815
To: HCDX <[email protected]>, CDX
        <[email protected]>
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed

I don't know if this is Aqsa but on 2032 there were drums play then
Arabic folk  songs, posisbly religious (i hard allah on 2037 ) on 5815
A signal  of S7 here , 34343



------------------------------

Message: 15
Date: Fri, 09 Jan 2009 23:03:20 +0200
From: Zacharias <[email protected]>
Subject: [HCDX] COREXION : Aqsa ?  5815
To: HCDX <[email protected]>, CDX
        <[email protected]>
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed

New:
On  2028 there was indeed an ID from  a male speaker heard as Asa , 
mentioned kHz and continued with talks that pass 2100 without clock
Seems  again as religious???  Reference to mujahedeen on 2102

older:


I don't know if this is Aqsa but on 2032 there were drums play then
Arabic folk  songs, posisbly religious (i hard allah on 2037 ) on 5815
A signal  of S7 here , 34343




------------------------------

Message: 16
Date: Fri, 9 Jan 2009 21:10:00 +0000 (GMT)
From: JOSE MIGUEL ROMERO ROMERO <[email protected]>
Subject: [HCDX] Al Aqsa TV & Radio Crew Abducted by Fatah " Security
        Services" in Tulkarem.
To: Frecuencia DX <[email protected]>
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8

Jan 9, 2008
Al Aqsa TV & Radio Crew Abducted by Fatah " Security Services" in Tulkarem. 

http://palestinefreevoice.blogspot.com/2008/01/al-aqsa-tv-radio-crew-abducted-by-fatah.html

Many Hamas affiliated journalists and media outlets in Gaza Strip and the West 
Bank have in the past been attacked by Fatah.

January 8-9 2008




Hiyam Noir




GAZA- Hamas movement said on Tuesday, that the Fatah controlled "security 
services" of Palestinian Authority on the West Bank, have abducted four 
journalists in Tulkarem.Without any charges the journalists have been held for 
three consequent days.



The journalists are,the director in chief of the Hamas affiliated Siraj Al-Aqsa 
TV station located in Dabas Mall in Tulkarem, Hassan Mohammad Ishtawi,the Al- 
Aqsa TV correspondent Tariq Shahab, and the two news paper journalists Salim 
Tayeh and Fareed Al Sayed.


Mohammad Ishtaiwi also the owner of the "Mass Press" Center in Tulkarem - had 
his office ransacked and vandalized,computers and files stolen in early June 
last year.Luckily Ishtaiwi him self escaped without injuries, when Fatah gunmen 
invaded his office.The Fatah so called "security services" (with office in the 
city of Nablus, payed for by US money),have torched cars,set buildings on 
fire,assaulted Hamas institutions, abducted and even killed Hamas affiliated 
members on the West Bank.

>From the early spring last year until the date of this report, the so called 
>"security services" ( of Fatah) have gravely violated the press freedom 
>implemented in Palestinian Basic Laws, the principles of international 
>humanitarian law, and international conventions related to the protection of 
>civilians in time of war.The Fatah"security services" based on the West Bank, 
>have after Hamas landslide victory in the Palestinian elections,frequently 
>conducted attacks on Hamas institutions and local members of PLC. Also 
>journalists and reporters working for newspapers and television stations 
>affiliated to Hamas movement as well as Hamas activists and supporters have 
>been attacked.

Fahmi M. Al- Sheik,the Director of Shuraka? Palestine Partners Center have 
condemned the abductions and is calling onto the Palestinian Authority to 
release the journalists. ?To implant basic freedoms stated in the Palestinian 
Basic Law, and to believe in the rights of the Palestinian People equally with 
other peoples, press freedom should be maintained and ensured, and the door of 
criticism widely open without penalty.The Shuraka member Fadi Abu Sada, said 
that ?journalists which are practicing civil tasks are civilians and should be 
protected, not arrested".

Previous Attacks on Hamas Media Outlets



In June 17 th of 2007, Fatah gunmen attacked Hassan Al Titi, an Al Jazeera 
cameraman in Nablus, setting fire to the first floor of his house and totally 
destroying his cameras and equipment.The fire also destroyed broadcasting 
equipment belonging to PAL Media located in his house.

On the 27th of June, 2007, Fatah issued a statement and minutes later they 
attacked the Al Jazeera satellite station and its reporters working in the 
Palestine territories.The Mahmoud Abbas West Bank based " presidential guards"- 
called back then,stormed the offices of a Hamas - controlled television station 
in the West Bank city of Ramallah, on the 26Th of July and seized equipment.The 
station said three of its staff were held by Abbas's "Presidential Guard" in 
the raid in Ramallah.

On the 14th of June, 2007, gunmen said to be Fatah activists, attacked the Al 
Ruwad media center in the West Bank, stealing all of the office computers and 
destroying the interior furniture.On the 15Th of June, 2007, Fatah gunmen 
attacked the Jabal Al Nar, radio station in Nablus city, destroying 
broadcasting equipment and stealing computers.The station later said that three 
members of their staff were detained and that Hamas demanded their release.

The June12th, attacks on al-Aqsa Television by a security force, loyal to the 
former Palestinian president,Mahmoud Abbas of the Fatah movement, was the 
clearest instance of creating factional conflicts.The Al -Aqsa Television 
station was still on air, broadcasting from its main base in Gaza, where the 
Hamas movement has its main power base. The station said three of its staff 
were held by Abbas's "Presidential Guard" in the raid in Ramallah. Fatah 
"security services" attacked Hamas' Al-Aqsa TV and also the radio stations came 
under fire. The Al-Aqsa TV station was surrounded by Fatah gunmen, who received 
orders to stop the station's broadcasts. Shortly after the attack, the station 
begun playing pro-Fatah chants, a sign that the so called "security services" 
back then, had seized control of the station.


      



------------------------------

Message: 17
Date: Fri, 9 Jan 2009 21:34:23 +0000 (GMT)
From: JOSE MIGUEL ROMERO ROMERO <[email protected]>
Subject: [HCDX] Ataques a la television Al-Aqsa
To: Frecuencia DX <[email protected]>
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8

Ataques a la television Al-Aqsa
Jueves, 08 de Enero de 2009 

https://www.ccn-cert.cni.es/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&catid=61&id=2068%3Ael-conflicto-arabe-israeli-tambien-en-el-ciberespacio&Itemid=127&lang=es

El secuestro de la estaci?n de televisi?n ?rabe Al-Aqsa de televisi?n el fin de 
semana pasado es otra de las muestras de la guerra en el ciberespacio que ha 
acompa?ado el conflicto en curso en la Franja de Gaza. En esta ocasi?n, la 
televisi?n fue instrumentalizada para difundir mensajes de propaganda pro 
israel?es. Al-Aqsa es conocida por la emisi?n de dibujos animados antisemitas 
durante el a?o pasado.

El s?bado pasado, la programaci?n de Al-Aqsa fue interrumpida por la imagen de 
un tel?fono que no paraba de sonar y que nadie contestaba. La voz en off 
superpuesta avisaba que ?los l?deres de Hamas se esconden y te abandonan en la 
l?nea de combate?. La radio Al-Aqsa tambi?n fue interrumpida por propaganda 
pro-israel?.

Pero, como se ha visto, los ataques cibern?ticos no se restringen a uno de los 
bandos, no el unilateral. Ejemplo de ello es c?mo un servidor de registro de 
dominios israel? fue hackeado la semana pasada por un grupo hacker de 
Marruecos. El ataque del equipo "Team Evil" sobre el sistema de registro de 
DomainTheNet remit?a a los navegantes a una p?gina web que conten?a un mensaje 
antiisrael?.


      



------------------------------

Message: 18
Date: Fri, 9 Jan 2009 22:33:30 +0000 (GMT)
From: JOSE MIGUEL ROMERO ROMERO <[email protected]>
Subject: [HCDX] Francia proh?be las emisiones del canal de Hamas "Al
        Aqsa TV"
To: Frecuencia DX <[email protected]>
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1


Francia proh?be las emisiones del canal de Hamas
Publicada el Viernes 9 de Enero 2009 00:00

http://www.sateliteinfos.com/actu/tp.asp/tp/16397/francia-prohibe-las-emisiones-del-canal-de-hamas.html

Las autoridades francesas reguladoras de las telecomunicaciones han decidido 
que el canal del movimiento terrorista islamista Hamas Al-Aqsa TV, que emite 
desde Gaza, no sea difundido en territorio europeo. Los responsables del canal 
anunciaron, el pasado lunes, que comenzar?an a emitir sus programas en Europa, 
a partir de anteayer, a trav?s del sat?lite de telecomunicaciones Eurobird, de 
Eutelsat, compa??a de derecho franc?s radicada en Par?s. Pero a d?a de hoy, el 
canal de momento emite en las frecuencias en abierto 10.873 GHz, polarizaci?n 
vertical, y 10.911 GHz, polarizaci?n vertical, del Atlantic Bird 4.


*Al Aqsa TV, controlada por Hamas, es retransmitida v?a sat?lite por ArabSat a 
todo Cercano Oriente, Europa y gran parte de ?frica.

Con frecuencia, la emisora ensalza la violencia y llama a la lucha contra 
Israel y los Estados Unidos, incluso en programas infantiles.

Ahora emitiendo por Onda Corta en 5815 y 5835. 

?Desde don de transmiten?, Candidatos, Egipto, Arabia Saud? e Ir?n, aunque no 
se puede descartar ning?n otro pa?s isl?mico.


    


      



------------------------------

Message: 19
Date: Fri, 9 Jan 2009 18:42:01 EST
From: [email protected]
Subject: [HCDX] African Logs
To: [email protected]
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"

** EQUATORIAL GUINEA. 15190, Radio Africa, *1517-1530, Jan 9,
abrupt  sign on with the usual English religious talk. Gospel music. 
Fair level but  poor audio with slight distortion & somewhat low
modulation. (Brian  Alexander, PA) 
 
** ETHIOPIA. 9560.31v, Radio Ethiopia, 1800-1815, Jan 9, Tentative 
with  Horn of Africa music. Talk in unidentified language. Echo 
announcements.  Drifting up to 9560.36 by 1810. Poor in noisy
conditions. (Brian Alexander,  PA) 
 
** MALI. 5995, RTVM, 0745-0759*, Jan 9, French talk. Some local 
guitar  music. Sign off with flute IS. Fair, but co-channel QRM from
Radio Australia  at their 0758 sign on. (Brian Alexander, PA) 
 
** MALI. 9635, RTVM, *0800-0828, Jan 9, sign on with flute IS &  
opening French ID announcements. Some local string music at 
0801.  Vernacular talk at 0802. Local guitar music at 0825. Rustic
vocals. ?Radio  Mali? ID. Fair. Weak // 7284.58. (Brian Alexander, PA) 
 
** ZANZIBAR. 11735, Radio Tanzania-Zanzibar, 1800, Jan 9, no sign
of  Zanzibar today. (Brian Alexander, PA) 
 

Brian Alexander, Mechanicsburg, PA,  U.S.A.  
Equipment:  TenTec RX-340, two 100 foot longwires  
 


**************New year...new news.  Be the first to know what is making 
headlines. (http://news.aol.com?ncid=emlcntusnews00000002)


End of Hard-Core-DX Digest, Vol 73, Issue 13
********************************************

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