Gypsy protest outside BBC 'will go ahead'
Campaigners from the Gypsy and Traveller communities say a protest outside the BBC's London headquarters to save a two-hour radio show will go ahead tomorrow despite assurances the programme will not be axed.
Supporters and musicians plan to sing a Romany lament at noon to appeal to BBC bosses not to cut the Rokker Radio show, which goes out on BBC Three Counties Radio in Buckinghamshire, Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire every Sunday between 7pm and 9pm.
Presenter and Romany journalist Jake Bowers had feared the BBC were planning to axe his show due to funding issues.
He argued that the money spent on the show is "insignificant compared to the financial commitment the BBC rightly gives to other linguistic, national and ethnic minorities across the UK".
But a BBC spokesman said there was no intention to close Rokker Radio:
"It is true that we have had discussions with the presenter about a range of options for the programme, including whether there might be potential for expanding the range and scope of programming covering these issues - for example by offering programming to other radio stations across the BBC local radio family.
"We will continue to look at how best we can refresh our coverage and to ensure that we are achieving best value for our listeners, but we can reassure listeners that there is no plan to close the programme down at this time."
The rally at Broadcasting House in Portland Place will still take place, but in celebration of Romany Nation Day tomorrow and to demand better media coverage for the Gypsy and Traveller communities.
Author Janna Eliot, who is part Roma and will be attending the rally,
said: "We are trying to establish that Gypsies should not have to fight for something that other communities are rightly given. [Rokker Radio] is one programme in Britain and we should not have to fight for it.
"Gypsies and Travellers get a lot of abuse in the press and we are hoping to have a lot of support and to show the BBC that Roma are a force to be reckoned with."
Supporters from The Dale Farm Housing Association who are fighting eviction from a Traveller village in Basildon, Essex, are also expected to turn out.
Gypsy and Traveller journalists, campaigners and Traveller education advocates are also backing the campaign.
Orhan Galjus, a Kosovan Roma journalist, said: "The BBC should begin the process of dedicating the same level of resources to the Gypsy and Traveller community as it does to other ethnic and linguistic minorities in Britain.
"If it is right that the BBC broadcasts in Welsh and Gaelic and provides an entire network to the Asian community, it is also right that it provide the same commitment to Europe's largest ethnic minority community, the Romany people.
He added: "Services in the Romany language are also badly needed to support and inform those communities who currently have no access to independent broadcasting.
"Across many parts of Europe a de facto apartheid blights the Romany community and its prospects. We urgently need the BBC's help to inform and educate our 12 million strong European nation."
Labels: BBC, Gypsy, Rokker Radio, Travellers
