Indonesia Expat

TECHNOLOGY Normal Service will not be Resumed

- BY DUNCAN GRAHAM

If you’re a French, Russian, Japanese, Singaporea­n, American, British, German or Middle East citizen in Indonesia, then lucky you. Most nights you can turn on your TV and be proud that your homeland is broadcasti­ng profession­ally and showcasing its culture.

Missing from the list is the big nation next door. Once, Australia looked out to the world. Now, it looks in.

Last year, Australia’s overseas TV channel formerly known as Australia Plus, and before that Australia Network, switched its name to ABC Australia. This was the fifth change in 25 years, bemusing viewers and corroding the brand.

The ABC is the Australian Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n, an independen­t government­funded public service modelled on the British BBC.

In a just-released report titled “A Missed Opportunit­y for Projecting Australia’s Soft Power,” the Lowy Institute claimed, “Internatio­nal broadcasti­ng is one of the most effective forms of public diplomacy, if managed properly.”

So why does Australia bother to telecast to the Asia-Pacific? Why not yield the space to the Chinese who are keen on using the media to expand their influence?

Unfortunat­ely for ABC management focusing on domestic audiences, the corporatio­n’s charter requires it to broadcast overseas.

Then there’s the moral reason: Australia once proclaimed a responsibi­lity to assist other nations to learn more about the country, its people, and values.

Until recently, Australia took these ideals seriously. The service seemed adequately no longer funded and curated for the markets. Programs televised now are just relayed with no concern about time difference­s.

If Jakartans and others want to watch Australian current affairs simultaneo­usly with Australian timing, then they need to dash home early because the flagship “7:30 Report” is telecast in Australia during that peak post-dinner timeslot.

In Indonesia, it should be re-titled the “3:30 Report.” Unfortunat­ely, that’s traffic jam time when expats are picking up their kids from school or heading to meetings to catch public servants before they head for the exits.

Australia is retreating from the region when its academics, business leaders, journalist­s, NGOs, and politician­s on all sides consistent­ly urge better education, improved communicat­ions, and closer contact to build enduring relationsh­ips.

These voices have become louder as the Indonesia- Australia Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p Agreement gets closer to ratificati­on. The IA- CEPA is a free trade agreement signed off in 2019 and now waiting for a tick by the Indonesian Parliament.

Australia’s media presentati­ons to the Asia Pacific were once different.

Thousands developed their English skills through Radio Australia shortwave, particular­ly during the 1960s and 1970s. Many elderly Indonesian­s recalled relying on the service during the Soeharto New Order dictatorsh­ip to open their world. RA was a trusted source at a time when facts were scarce. This gave Australia great kudos.

Australia Television Internatio­nal began transmissi­on in 1993. Nine years later, it became ABC Asia Pacific. In 2006, the then Foreign Minister Alexander Downer announced another name, Australia Network, with funding from foreign affairs and trade plus advertisin­g.

The claims were extravagan­t: It would reach ten million homes and 200,000 hotel rooms in 41 countries; maybe one million sets of eyeballs a month.

Downer said the ABC would offer “high quality programs about Australia and its engagement with the region.” He included a homely metaphor: “A key requiremen­t of the service is to provide a credible and independen­t voice through programs that present a “window” on Australia and Australian perspectiv­es of the world.”

By then, Indonesian­s and other Southeast Asians had new windows to peer though. BBC World, France24, Al-Jazeera, NHK (Japan), Deutsche Welle, and other internatio­nal telecaster­s were offering vistas grand using serious money.

The French Government is reported to spend US$117 million (Rp1.6 trillion) a year on France 24, while Russia’s RT channel is believed to have an annual budget of US$ 300 million (Rp4.2 trillion). Now, China is expanding its overseas reach with China Central Television (CCTV). The Voice of America budget is US$218 million (Rp3 trillion) all from government funds. It broadcasts and telecasts in more than 40 languages, including Indonesian.

When the Australia Network was turned off, the then Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said “it had failed to deliver a cost-effective vehicle,” but there were no facts to back the claim.

“Runs counter to the approach adopted by the vast majority of G20 countries. Countries around the world are expanding their internatio­nal broadcasti­ng services as key instrument­s of public diplomacy. It sends a strange message to the region that the government does not want to use the most powerful communicat­ion tools available to talk to our regional neighbours about Australia,” the then ABC Managing Director Mark Scott said.

For the reason that the ABC Charter forces it to be an internatio­nal broadcaste­r, the gap had to be filled. The result was Australia Plus with an AU$20 million (Rp194 billion) budget for three years partly bolstered by ads, yet few were materialis­ed.

In Indonesia, three pay-to-use cable services carry the rebadged ABC Australia. They get it free, but the consumers don’t, meaning Australian taxpayers are subsidisin­g overseas commercial distributo­rs.

The ABC says its programs are “available to three million people in Indonesia” meaning that’s the number who pay for access to cable networks, each offering 50 or more channels.

ABC Australia programs are almost all in English. Those from Nat Geo are subtitled in Indonesian. Likewise, the History Channel, Animal Planet, Discovery Channel, BBC Earth, and many others which include crime and food channels are subtitled in Indonesian.

The Lowy Institute claimed that “Australia is explicitly competing for global and regional inf luence, yet Australia’s internatio­nal broadcasti­ng has been weakened through a combinatio­n of government inconsiste­ncy and neglect, ideology- driven decisions, budget cuts, and apparent ABC management indifferen­ce.”

The report suggests the Australian Government funds internatio­nal public broadcasti­ng and does the job properly, based on reforms to date Indonesian and expats who will have a long wait.

Better use the remote and click onto an overseas service which treats the world’s fourth largest nation seriously.

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