Monday, November 04, 2024

Trans World Radio Africa, 50th Anniversary


Trans World Radio Africa celebrates its 50th anniversary in Eswatini (Swaziland). It was indeed on the 1st of November 1974 that TWR started broadcasting from this former British protectorate it became independent under the name of Swaziland, the country was renamed Kingdom of Eswatini. This is the smallest state in Africa after Gambia.

 Already in the 60s, TWR wanted to get closer to its listeners instead of focusing all its means of broadcasting on its partnership with Radio-Monte-Carlo, of which it is a tenant in Monaco on the Fontbonne plateau.

 Different transmitter centers had been installed in the 4 corners of the world: Apart from Monaco for Europe, they were present on the island of Bonaire in the Antilles for America and on the island of Guam for Asia and Oceania.

 Missing Africa, Trans World Radio wanted to set up in South Africa. Efforts to get a license were in vain.

In 1973 TWR obtained its license to broadcast on short and medium waves from Swaziland.

On the 1st November 1974, the evangelical radio mission began broadcasting with 2 25 kW shortwave transmitters from Mpangala Ranch, 40 kilometres from Manzini. The following year a third OC transmitter was installed, as well as a 317-C mediumwave transmitter from Continental Electronics that ran at 1170 KHz.

 The exact origin of this transmitter is unknown but rumors have rang that it was a former transmitter of a pirate radio. Must be transmitter No. 12 of the former BBC relay in Botswana: it was originally commissioned by O'Rahilly the operator of "Radio Caroline" and handed over to the BBC during the Rhodesia crisis.

 In addition to local productions in 8 languages, programs in German from the Gospel Radio (ERF) studios in Wetzlar were also broadcast. Subsequently, the programmes were taken from the studios of TWR Africa Regional Office in Johannesburg.

 Shortwave transmitters were replaced in the late 90s by three 100 kilowatt transmitters and one 50 kilowatt connected to five antenna networks. Continental Electronics' 50KW Type 317-C Medium Wave Transradio Transradio 100KW TRAM 100 Transradio Transradio Transmitter in 2016. This transmitter would have been bought second hand at the tenth of its price at Media Broadcast, it had previously broadcasted Deutschlandfunk programs. TWR has also developed an FM network that covers the country.

 After relocating studios to Johannesburg, TWR did not wish to expand its Swaziland broadcasting centre, preferring to rent hourly beaches in Meyerton, South Africa.

Since Meyerton's arrest, all the programs for Africa start from Swaziland.

(FB/Radio Magazine)