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http://www.assistnews.net/Stories/2013/s13050030.htm
Dedication of New Shortwave Radio Site in Australia Fulfills 24-Year Vision

By Jeremy Reynalds
Senior Correspondent for ASSIST News Service
AUSTRALIA (ANS) -- David Maindonald seemed incredulous as he reflected on his 
24-year vision to air the 
gospel via shortwave radio from Australia to the Asia Pacific Region.


Unveiling a plaque which reads, 'HCJB Australia International Broadcast 
Facility. Dedicated to the glory 
of God. 21st April 2013. 'So that all may hear' (Romans 10:14).' Left to right: 
Ty Stakes, Stephen 
Sutherland, Wayne Pederson, Dale Stagg, David Maindonald, 
Derek Kickbush.

“Yes, the story of HCJB Global-Australia is truly a story of what God has 
done,” he told a crowd at the 
dedication of the ministry’s new international broadcast site in Kununurra, 
adjacent to the original 
site that had been used to broadcast since 2003.

“And we want to give Him all the glory,” he commented, referring to an Old 
Testament Bible verse, “See 
what God has done” (Numbers 23:23).

According to a story by by Harold Goerzen for HCJB Global, others urged him to 
abandon what was called 
in 1989 his “far-fetched” vision, foreseeing obstacles in acquiring radio 
licenses and land for the 
site. When potential donors were approached with the idea, they predicted 
problems finding staff and 
money for the project.

“That wasn't easy to handle,” said Maindonald, who led the mission's Australia 
office for nearly two 
decades.

Programs Air in 26 Languages

HCJB said among the 100 attendees at the April 21 event, braving 105-degree 
Fahrenheit heat and biting 
insects, was HCJB Global President Wayne Pederson, who called the station’s 
presence on the shortwave 
frequencies a miracle. The facilities broadcast the gospel in 26 languages from 
Kununurra near the 
northern tip of Western Australia.

“It’s reaching some of the most populous and least-reached places of the 
world—going into Japan, China, 
India, Bangladesh, Indonesia and Malaysia,” Pederson said later in an audio 
report.

HCJB said excerpts from listeners’ letters were featured in a brochure 
distributed at the ceremony.

One listener had written from India’s Gujarat state, “We do not have a church. 
Radio programs are a 
blessing for us to know about Jesus. We listen to Hindi, Urdu, Gujarati and 
Punjabi programs. The 
reception is good. Pray that my family and I and would accept Jesus too.”

HCJB said a listener in Indonesia wrote, “Your station is totally different 
from any other I’ve ever 
known. It brings peace, joy and hope—things that have been lost in my life for 
quite a long time.”

Multiple Challenges Overcome

Pederson outlined some of the trials encountered along the way. “Through many 
years of overcoming 
regulations, federal permissions, local clearances, financial challenges and 
power line difficulties, 
this station is now a reality,” HCJB reported he said.

Then Pederson related some of the bargains obtained to broadcast from the site.

He said, “The curtain antenna came from Croatia. It was brand new but it was 
intended by the communists 
to send propaganda all across the former Soviet Union. The towers were bought 
from the Australian Army 
for 5 cents on the dollar. Those are scrap metal prices! The transmitters are 
the refurbished 
transmitters from Radio Station HCJB in Ecuador, now being repurposed to reach 
this part of the world.”

Also attending the ceremony were HCJB Global Asia Pacific Executive Director Ty 
Stakes, Australian 
Member of Parliament Barry Haase and Meg Shedley, who turns 90 this year.

HCJB said back in 1997 when the Australian government still wasn’t issuing 
international broadcast 
licenses, she and her husband, Don, donated a 200-acre farm in Kununurra in 
faith that it could serve as 
an international shortwave site.

“This site has so many advantages,” John Stanley had said of the site at that 
time. An engineer who 
helped to staff the mission’s shortwave site in Ecuador decades ago, Stanley 
serves as an international 
broadcasting consultant.

“Assuming that a license can be obtained, it would be difficult to see it as 
anything other than God’s 
provision,” HCJB said Stanley had concluded.

After the towers were procured, HCJB reported, staff members and countless 
volunteers began erecting 
them on the donated land that was also used to raise sugarcane. The 
applications for broadcast licenses 
were turned down three times however, according to Maindonald. Then an 
unexpected answer came on April 
18 2001.

“The laws of Australia were changed, and we were given not one but four 
international broadcasting 
licenses, and we had to be on air within two years,” he recounted. “Suddenly 
the dream of international 
broadcasting came alive again.”

Launching International Broadcasts

An HC100 (100,000-watt) shortwave transmitter that had been shipped from 
Ecuador to the U.S. was in turn 
shipped to Australia just as U.S. dockworkers went on strike. In late 2002 it 
arrived in Australia, 
where station staff needed every bit of time to get it operational in time for 
the deadline.

HCJB said negotiations with authorities resulted in more than $100,000 in duty 
and taxes being waived. 
The shortwave station went on the air on Jan. 5 2003, with five hours of 
programming to the South 
Pacific. A month later the South Asia broadcasts to India began.

Although well-suited to shortwave broadcasting, the original site was too small 
for expansion.

“It was always intended to be temporary,” according to Dale Stagg, Australian 
director and CEO. 
“Basically, when the licenses were granted we had a two-year timeframe to get 
on the air so we had to 
get up and running as best we could and look to future development beyond that 
time. The new site is 
part of a 1,200-acre parcel of land leased from the state government about a 
mile from the original 
site.”

HCJB said the Shedley property is now used for staff housing.

In 2005 a high-quality curtain antenna was purchased from a radio station in 
Croatia for a quarter of 
its market value and erected three years later. In 2006 a second HC100 was 
shipped to Australia. The 21-
year lease from the Western Australia government for the 1,200-acre site was 
also signed in 2006. In 
2011 the high-tension power line was installed along with a donated parabolic 
antenna from Ecuador.

HCJB said in 2012 one of the existing transmitters was relocated to the new 
transmitter building, and 
broadcasts began at the new site in July 2012. In March 2013 broadcasts 
commenced using both 100-kw 
transmitters.

“India, one of our priority countries, has a population of over 1.2 billion 
people,” HCJB reported Stagg 
said. “Sixty percent of India’s population does not even have access to FM, so 
shortwave for India is 
still a crucial means of communication.”

“A third HC100 coming in a few months will be digital, enabling us to reach a 
whole new audience with 
the clear, digital sounds of shortwave,” added Pederson. “(Our Australian 
partners) are dedicated 
people, and they've done a great job. You should see this impressive facility.”

“Our broadcast site gives us great access to the Asia Pacific Region,” HCJB 
said Stagg recounted. “Our 
region contains more than 4 billion people and many of the world’s unreached 
people groups.
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