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eTuktuk, taking information down the bumpy dirt-road in
Sri Lanka (by Sajan Venniyoor) |
Frederick Noronha 2006-07-18 02:39
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eTUKTUK, TAKING
INFORMATION DOWN THE BUMPY DIRT-ROAD IN SRI LANKA
By
Sajan Venniyoor venniyoor@rediffmail.com
Up in the
hills of Kothmale, about 25 kilometres southwest of Kandy
in the central highlands of Sri Lanka, a strange
hybrid vehicle can be seen sputtering along the dirt
tracks of Kothmale's villages. At first glance, it is an
autorickshaw or tuktuk, a familiar sight on the roads of
South Asia and as common on the streets of Sri Lanka as
sarongs.
But this is no ordinary three-wheeler. This
is the eTukTuk, the world's first radio-station and
multimedia centre on three wheels.
In 1982, when
the Mahaweli Irrigation project displaced thousands of
villagers in central Sri Lanka, the government eased
their resettlement by putting up several community radio
projects in and around the resettlement
villages. Kothmale Community Radio (KCR) came up in 1989,
and while the other 'community radio' stations soon ran
into rough weather, KCR 98.4 FM went on to become
something of a legend.
On the walls of the somewhat
run-down building that houses the Kothmale CR and
Multimedia Centre, there are old, faded photographs of a
slim, curly haired young man in a sarong, deep in
conversation with local villagers. Sunil Wijesinghe, now
the Station Controller of Kothmale CR, is still the
most unassuming of men, as likely to grab a pickaxe as
a microphone and turn his hand to whatever odd
job that needs to be done around the station.
The
radio station, which is part of the cash-strapped
Sri Lanka Broadcasting Corporation, runs on a shoestring
budget. Sunil and his team keep things going with a blend
of ingenuity and good humour. The studio is a marvel
of improvisation. The mixer is of venerable antiquity, as
are the spool recorders. The acoustic treatment on the
walls seems to consist -- I was afraid to ask -- of
old foam-covered coir mattresses.
The only pieces
of modern broadcast equipment I could see were a CD
player and a PC, donated by UNESCO. There is just one
multi-purpose studio, and programmes have to be
recorded when the station shuts down between
transmissions. A second booth -- presently a storage room
-- is awaiting conversion into a production studio. When?
I ask. "As soon as funds are available," says Sunil
Wijesinghe, echoing a common refrain in
Kothmale.
Next only to Sunil, Benjamin ("Mr. Ben")
Grubb is one of the minor marvels of Kothmale. Ben is a
slim, bespectacled Australian in his late twenties, whose
air of detached abstraction hides a sharp intellect and a
passion for all things technical. Ben Grubb came to Sri
Lanka as a tourist and -- somehow ended up -- at
Kothmale, where he is now the Project Advisor and guiding
spirit behind the eTukTuk project. He handpicked the
heavy-duty battery, inverter, mixer, amplifier, cables
and all the other odds and ends that fit snugly into the
not-too-spacious interior of the tuktuk.
When the
project runs out of funds - an all too common occurrence
-- Mr. Ben reportedly dips into his own resources to keep
things ticking. "My girlfriend supports me,"
he deadpans.
The eTukTuk was unveiled during the
World Press Freedom Day conference (1-3 May) in Colombo
this year. The bright blue three-wheeler with its Heath
Robinson interior was an instant hit. Later that week in
Colombo, the AMARC (World Association of Community Radio
Broadcasters) round table discussion on "Community Radio
and its Social Impact" was covered live by the
eTukTuk.
"With this eTukTuk, it seems to me you've
got a great vehicle both in the physical and the symbolic
sense, to go out to the communities and the
neighbourhoods and to let people speak through their
community radio station," said Steve Buckley, President
of AMARC. "I think that this is a trend that is going to
catch on."
The "great" vehicle is an Indian-built
Bajaj RE (rear engine) four-stroke auto rickshaw,
powerful enough to climb the steep hills of Kothmale
while carrying what is, in effect, a complete
radio station and multimedia centre, and a couple
of operators as well.
Ben explains how the
three-wheeler was stripped down and rebuilt to his
specifications by local mechanics, with special racks to
take the heavy-duty battery, inverter, amplifier and
mixer. The roof rack -- sturdy enough to support Ben's
weight -- holds two speakers.
There is a shelf for
the laptop, and space to mount a CDMA phone, scanner,
camera and battery-operated printer. Even in the remotest
villages of Kothmale, the eTukTuk can get you on the
internet, scan and upload documents, download
files, print them out and take digital
photographs.
Arthur C Clarke -- a Sri Lankan resident
himself -- would be proud. Baffled, perhaps, but proud.
A portable 1000 watt generator produces
enough electricity to recharge the main battery and
keep the equipment running for hours.
When I
reached Kothmale on 10 May, the eTukTuk was already
in its lair -- a converted kitchen in the Kothmale CR
building -- having been driven the 150 odd kilometers
from Colombo to Kothmale by a visibly tired Ben and his
crew. But there was work to be done -- a field broadcast
was scheduled that evening, the eTukTuk's first community
OB (Outside Broadcast) event in Kothmale, at the village
of Weliganga.
Weliganga ('river-flats') clings to a
hillside a few kilometers downhill from KCR. As the
tuktuk rolls into a small clearing with a dilapidated
shed at its far end, a light monsoon rain begins to fall.
Within minutes the crew has fired up the transmitter and
laptop, and cables snake across the wet grass.
The
tuktuk's transmitter is a vintage 50 watt FM exciter,
a clunky beast that goes back to the early days of KCR
and is too big fit anywhere except on the rooftop rack.
(This is an obvious worry for the Kothmale station -- you
don't carry sensitive broadcast equipment on an exposed
rack in the monsoon -- and they are raising the funds to
buy a sleeker model that will fit inside the tuktuk). I
watch bemused as an 18 foot antenna mast is swiftly put
together from three lengths of galvanized iron pipe
clamped end-to-end.
Sunil Shanta, KCR's relief
announcer launches into a practiced spiel that's fed into
the twin speakers mounted on the tuktuk's roof. Soon, the
clearing and the shed fill with an expectant crowd --
mostly women and children -- some carrying plastic chairs
and mats.
Weliganga is a Dalit village, a hamlet of
drum makers and subsistence farmers, generally
shunned by their better off neighbours. Sunil
Wijesinghe, KCR's station manager confides to me that
only a few days earlier, a local monk had stormed into
his office, outraged by the contents of a
recent programme. Apparently, the radio station had
aired the comments of Weliganga's villagers, who
said that they were not allowed entry into the
local temple. Even their children, said the
villagers, had to travel long distances to study
elsewhere as they were discriminated against in the
local school.
This could well be true, as I soon
learn. Bright-eyed Achala, a 9th standard student, tells
me that she goes to school in Ulapane, some miles away,
as do her friends Nirosha, Niluka and Nilukshika who
cluster around her and nod vigorously.
With monsoon
clouds rolling overhead and the shed's roof leaking like
a sieve, the show gets underway. Achala launches into a
Sinhala prayer song. Livelier numbers follow, and
soon the shed is filled with singing, clapping and
dancing youngsters, with three drummers maintaining a
steady beat.
Ben Grubb dashes into the eTukTuk to
check on the equipment, and swears under his breath when
he finds an audio cable plugged into the wrong socket.
Buddhika Sampath, KCR's content creation specialist,
shoos Ben away and takes over the audio recording. Inside
the shed, Sunil Shanta, the programme presenter, works
the crowd and keeps up a steady banter.
The rain
dies down to a sporadic drizzle. It is half past six and
too dark to see, but the unlit shed is still alive
with song, drumbeats and girlish laughter. Reluctantly,
Sunil winds up the proceedings. The hill roads are muddy
and punctuated by puddles, and the eTukTuk splashes its
way back to the station driven by Nishanta, the
strapping volunteer-driver.
We are persuaded to
stay behind and visit a local 'kovil'. The shrine, little
more than an out-house, is bedecked with a startling
array of Hindu and Buddhist deities and presided over by
a generously proportioned shaman. Smiling broadly, she
assures us that she has the power to locate lost
objects ("Ask her what happened to my MiniDisk recorder,"
mutters Ben) and perform nameless acts of
sorcery.
That night, over salted peanuts and
duty-free Scotch at Sunil Wijesinghe's house, it is time
for a reality check. Earlier that week in Colombo, I had
heard frequent criticism that the Kothmale community
radio experiment had outlived its usefulness. "Ask Sunil
when he is going to replicate Kothmale," said the cynical
International Relations Advisor of one of Sri Lanka's
best-known NGOs.
There were constant jibes -- not
least of all from former Kothmale staff -- that the
"community radio" station had very little community
involvement, since it was effectively owned and run by
the Sri Lanka Broadcasting Corporation.
It is true
that Kothmale's success is offset by the comparative
failure of other community radio stations that were set
up in the region at the same time as Kothmale CR. But, as
Sunil points out, it is precisely the support of
the community that sets Kothmale apart, and accounts for
its success. "This evening at Weliganga," he asks
earnestly, "did you feel that the community is not
involved?"
Nevertheless, Kothmale is an exception.
Sri Lanka is not the only country in South Asia without a
proper community radio policy. In Colombo, I bump into
AHM Bazlur Rahman of BNNRC (Bangladesh NGOs Network
for Radio & Communication) at an international
ICT conference. Bazlur-bhai and I perform what's by
now a familiar ritual. "What's the latest on your
CR policy?" I ask. Bazlur Rahman shrugs
eloquently; "Many promises, no policy." "Same in India,"
I say, as we ponder the mysteries of broadcast
regulation in the subcontinent.
India's community
radio policy has been in the pipeline for so long that it
seems to have congealed. A draft policy was sent for
Cabinet approval on 6 October 2005, and then referred to
a Group of Ministers. Seven months on, the GoM has yet to
meet and take a decision on the new policy,
which promises to open up the airwaves to community
groups. No one is holding his breath.
In Kothmale,
Sunil is a worried man. Mr. Ben's finances are somewhat
precarious and he needs to return to Australia
to replenish his bank balance. "Please tell him to stay,"
urges Sunil, agitatedly splashing Sprite into his Johnny
Walker. They are very fond of Ben at Kothmale. But Ben is
gazing moodily into his half-empty glass, as if seeking
his missing MD recorder in its amber depths. He doesn't
want to leave Kothmale either, but he has little
choice.
Buddhika, Sunil Shanta and Nishanta are in
animated conversation, and occasionally seek my opinion
on broadcasting by tuktuk. Mellowed by the Scotch and
cool mountain air, I try to find parallels between the
massive OB vans of All India Radio -- lumbering
juggernauts of broadcast technology -- and the nimble
little tuktuk. I soon give up.
Clearly, the eTukTuk
is one of a kind. One can only hope - as Steve Buckley
prophesies -that the trend will catch on and that swarms
of eTukTuks will boldly go where no broadcast van has
gone before.
[A shorter version of this article was
published in Frontline, the prominent Indian
news-magazine, http://www.frontlineonnet.com/stories/20060714002009000.htm BytesForAll
thanks Sajan Veniyoor for sharing this article with
readers via their mailing list.
--FN]
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