Mongolian Christian TV Station Shuts Down
By MICHAEL KOHN The Associated Press
June 10, 2003 http://www.washingtonpost.com
ULAN BATOR, Mongolia - Tom Terry planned to give Mongolians another biblical summer
- along with "The Flintstones" and NBA basketball. The general director
of Eagle TV, a popular U.S.-Mongolian joint venture, had lined up nightly broadcasts
of "Abraham," "Jacob" and other films drawn from the Old and
New Testaments. But those plans were scrapped in April when disputes over finances
and control led the American partners to shut down 8-year-old Eagle TV, an unusual
Christian-oriented business in this Buddhist, formerly communist society.
Along with American-style evangelism, Eagle TV had brought Mongolia "The
Flintstones," live coverage of the Iraq war and NBA basketball games."Eagle
TV was founded for two purposes. One was to advance the gospel of Jesus Christ
and the other reason was for the advancement of freedom and democracy," Terry
said. Eagle TV went on the air in 1995. Over the years, its programming included
evangelists, biblical cartoons, Christian rock videos and testimonies by newly
converted Mongolians. "The Flintstones" was especially popular with
both parents and children. Dubbed into Mongolian, the 1960s American cartoon series
about Fred Flintstone's family and friends in the Stone Age town of Bedrock was
renamed "The Flint Stone People." "`The Flint Stone People' showed
how normal people celebrate life and happiness together," said Balganjav
Oyunchimeg, a
retired civil servant. "We learned many lessons from that family." Her
8-year-old grandson, Lhavagdorj Temujin, added: "I hope that it comes back
on TV again. I miss that show." Terry and his backers hope to start a new,
American-run station and are waiting to see whether the government will let them
apply for their own broadcast license. Eagle TV grew out of an unlikely alliance
in 1992 between born-again Christians from Sioux Falls, South Dakota, and Mongolia's
newly democratic government. The end of communist rule in 1990 had restored religious
freedom - and set off a flurry of activity by Christian groups trying to win Mongolian
converts. Mongolian leaders wanted to instill Western-style broadcasting in this
former Soviet ally. The country had only one television station - the state broadcaster
linked to the formerly communist Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party. With
many of Mongolia's 2.4 million people living in poverty, no station stood to make
a profit. But the Americans agreed to pay for Eagle TV, on condition that it show
evangelical programs along with its other fare. Eagle's news coverage also made
a splash in a society long limited to the communist government's bland official
media. "The Eagle TV news was very honest. They gave quick and detailed news,"
said Ganhuyag Mungunzul, a 23-year-old cook. "The other channels only gave
brief news." Eagle's coverage included a six-part series in 2000 titled "Swindle
of the Century" that looked at claims of corruption at the state-owned Erdenet
copper mine, Mongolia's biggest business. Much of the criticism in the report
was aimed at the former ruling party. Following the broadcast, an Eagle TV editor
was beaten by unknown attackers. Burglars stole documents used in the broadcast
from the home of another employee. After the U.S.-led attack on Iraq, Eagle carried
CNN, translated into Mongolian and with local commentary. Terry said as many as
95 percent of Mongolian viewers tuned in to Eagle's Iraq coverage, though the
country has no independent surveys to confirm that. Terry, 39, who has spent his
career at Christian-oriented radio and TV stations, moved to Mongolia with his
family last
November. During his summer biblical movies, viewers could call in to ask religious
questions or receive free Bibles. Steve Posey, president of the American group
that owned half of Eagle TV, said in an e-mail from Sioux Falls that 10,000 viewers
have called the station over the past three years to ask religious questions.
He said about 2,500 later converted to Christianity. Eagle TV broke up after the
Americans complained that their Mongolian partners failed to pay their share of
expenses, while the Mongolians said the Americans weren't sharing management control.
Terry said the Americans agreed in mid-April to end the venture and on the night
of April 21 removed their own broadcasting equipment. "I told the staff we
are going off the air at midnight and we weren't coming back on. They were in
shock," said Terry. "We put everything into the master control trailer
and at 1:30 a.m., a truck pulled up and we took it away."
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