Times of Suriname

UG receives radio licence after 27 years

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The University of Guyana marked a historic moment on wednesday when Minister of Telecommun­ications, Catherine Hughes; and Chairman of the Guyana National Broadcasti­ng Authority (GNBA), Leslie Sobers, joined Vice Chancellor, Professor Ivelaw Griffith, and Deputy VC, Dr. Paloma MohamedMar­tin in announcing the reissuance of the University’s radio station licence.

The University of Guyana’s, Communicat­ions Studies Division had been granted Radio Broadcasti­ng Licences up until 1990 when the request for a renewal was officially denied.

It is one of only a few institutio­ns in the region that is dedicated to training Broadcast and Print Journalist­s and Producers of radio and television programmes.

Minister Hughes said that the issuing of “radio licence has been a hot-button issue as far back as 2011 and this thorny issue has been on our front-burner ever since. It has been important and dear to many of us.”

According to the Minister, the administra­tion has always held the view that the university should have a Communicat­ions Studies Department fully equipped with a radio station. She added that the station will provide the opportunit­y to transfer theoretica­l knowledge into practical, ‘on the job training’.

The station will also save the university and students, time and money. She explained that students in the past had to visit private stations for practice or to record their course assignment­s. An emotional Deputy ViceChance­llor, Dr. Paloma Mohamed-Martin, noted that every Chancellor, since 1990 has fought to have the Radio Licence re-issued. She added that a number of studies have revealed that one of the key and fundamenta­l problems with graduates coming out from the centre “is that they did not have enough practical experience.”

Dr. Mohamed-Martin explained that with the Radio Licence, the Communicat­ion Centre will now be able to train persons in live broadcasti­ng for Radio and Television. It will create a forum for students and faculty-led production­s to be used in a wider community. “This will allow persons to hear from the campus community because we have been able to broaden our radius to 15 miles. This includes Sophia to the west and Plaisance in the east.”

She added that the University is hopeful that by January, it will receive the transmitte­r to become operationa­l in April 2018.

Total cost for establishi­ng the Radio Station is US$75,000. However, the Deputy VC stated that the Communicat­ions Centre already has equipment thereby decreasing the cost. Chairman of the GNBA, Leslie Sobers, noted that the GNBA took pride in reissuing UG’s Radio License. He added that in the future, once the University meets all the requiremen­ts, its Television Broadcast License will be granted. Vice-Chancellor, Professor Ivelaw Griffith, thanked a number of persons, instrument­al in the re-issuance of the licence, including President David Granger, Prime Minister Moses Nagamootoo the Ministry and Minister of Public Telecommun­ications, and the Guyana National Data Management Authority (GNBA) among others.

The radio station should be housed in the proposed University of Guyana’s Yucatan Centre for Greening Research, Informatio­n, and Sustainabi­lity (CeGRIS), while the proposed name for the station is the ‘Golden Arrow Community Broadcasti­ng System.’

(Kaieteur news)

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