SW Radio Africa
SW Radio Africa was an independent Zimbabwe radio station that broadcast from London, England, from 19 December 2001 to 10 August 2014.
Approach
file:Gerry Jackson of SW Radio Africa Nov 2007.jpg|thumb|left|Gerry Jackson receiving a Media Excellence award for creativity from Mishal Husain at the Association for International Broadcasting in 2007It was founded by Gerry Jackson. With the government of Robert Mugabe keeping a tight rein on the local airwaves, the station produced and presented news and current affairs programmes for broadcast in Zimbabwe on short wave and on the Internet. Programme content covered the decline of the agricultural sector due to government sponsored farm invasions, the ever-increasing currency hyper-inflation and the effect that HIV and AIDS was having on the population. Much of the content comprised pre-recorded but unedited, international telephone conversations between the presenter and people in Zimbabwe. These untrained members of the public gave their report of happenings, often as they were going down. The unedited form that gave the content legitimacy among the listeners. The news broadcasts were considered more factual than those of the state broadcaster. Staffed and run by black and white Zimbabweans in exile, it aimed to promote democracy and free speech, and to counter the mis-information and hate speech broadcast as propaganda, by the government-controlled Radio and TV stations. The station's website, www.swradioafrica.com, featured live online streaming, as well as archived broadcasts.
Broadcasts were typically for just 2 or 3 hours each evening.