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"Wavescan" is a weekly program for long distance radio hobbyists produced by Dr. Adrian M. Peterson, Coordinator of International Relations for Adventist World Radio. AWR carries the program over many of its stations (including shortwave). Adrian Peterson is a highly regarded DXer and radio historian, and often includes features on radio history in his program. We are reproducing those features below, with Dr. Peterson's permission and assistance.


Wavescan N640, May 30, 2021

The Radio Scene in the Lonely Isolated Maldive Islands: The Island of Gan

The Maldive Islands are a lonely and isolated cluster of islands that lie towards the southern end of a very long series of underwater mountains on the western side of the Indian subcontinent. This island chain stretches for 1000 miles, from the Aminidivi Islands in the extreme north to the Chagos Islands in the extreme south.

According to some historians, that long line of three islandic countries on the west side of the Indian sub-continent were all classified anciently as one contiguous whole, and they were all originally identified collectively back then as Lakshadweep. These days, however, three different political entities hold control of this lengthy cluster of sparsely separated islands and tropical atolls. Beginning at the north, thee three separate islandic units are identified as the Indian administered Lakshadweep Islands, then to the south the independent Maldive Islands, and then further south again to Diego Garcia in the Chagos Islands that are in dispute between England and Mauritius.

In 2019 we covered the radio scene in Diego Garcia, and then in 2019 and 2020 we covered the Lakshadweep Islands, and so now it is the turn for the Maldive Islands in the middle.

Only occasionally do the Maldive Islands feature in international news. One major occasion was the Indonesian Tsunami in 2004 in which massive waves up to 14 feet high swelled up from the ocean and overspread most of the islands in that low level islandic country. A total of 39 islands were badly damaged, 14 were completely destroyed, and a few minor islands were completely washed away.

The Coronavirus was first diagnosed in the Maldives on March 7 last year (2020) after an Italian tourist left a holiday resort island and returned to Europe. Four days later, several of the resort islands were closed down, and the resident visitors were required to remain in quarantine. However, the Maldivian government provided extra funding for the tourists during their unexpectedly extended vacation.

Another international news event that occurred in the Maldive Islands was the plunging of a Chinese Rocket into the Indian Ocean off the coast off the Maldive Islands earlier this month, on Saturday, May 8 (2021). This huge 22 ton rocket crashed into the ocean so close to the Maldive Islands, a little southwest of the capital island Male, that the event was filmed and the explosive sound was recorded on camera.

The small islandic nation known as the Maldives lies about 450 miles southwest of India and Sri Lanka, and it is made up of 26 coral atolls with 1192 islands, 200 of which are inhabited. The total area of all of the islands is just 120 square miles, with a population around half a million. The capital city is Male Island, though nearby is a newly developed suburban city that is built on an artificial island created from sand that is dredged from the ocean floor.

Due to global warming and the slowly rising ocean levels, many of the Maldive islands will one day be over-flooded. In 2008, the Maldivian government offered to buy land in Sri Lanka, or India, or Australia, or Africa and transfer their entire population to a new location. Instead though, they are now building new islands above the flood level within their own territory.

During WW II, the British began the construction of a highly secretive naval base at Gan Island in the south of the Maldive Islands. Identified only as Port T, this highly classified operation was intended as a backup if the Singapore naval base were to fall to the Japanese, and if the Trincomalee naval base in Sri Lanka were to become vulnerable to Japanese attack.

The secretive Port T at Gan was open to both the British operated Royal Navy and Royal Air Force from 1941 to 1945. The radio communication station at Gan back then operated 8 shortwave transmitters (mostly lower powered as a security precaution) together with 8 shortwave receivers.

Eleven years later, in 1956, the British government received approval from the Maldivian government to reopen and rebuild their base on Gan Island as a permanent air force facility. This government approval also allowed for the construction of a large radio communication station on nearby Hittadu Island. This shortwave facility contained at least 7 transmitters: 2 Marconi at 30 kW each, 1 Collins at 30 kW, two Racal at 7.5 kW, and 1 at 1 kW.

Seven years later, in mid-1963, a small unofficial volunteer radio broadcasting station was installed at the RAF Base on Gan Addu Island. This low powered mediumwave station provided entertainment and information for the benefit of the British personnel in the area, and it escaped international attention throughout its entire eight year lifetime.

However, in 1970, a regular British Forces Broadcasting Station-BFBS was installed on Gan Island, with 250 watts on 1215 kHz. Three years later the radio equipment was upgraded to 600 watts on 1560 kHz, and the station was then heard quite widely throughout the Indian Ocean areas.

During the three year period from 1971 to 1973, BFBS Gan was a joint operation between BFBS and the American AFRS radio system. However, this unique radio broadcasting station was closed forever in 1976 when the entire RAF Base was closed and transferred to the Maldivian government. These days, the whole area is an international tourist location.

More about the radio scene in the Maldive Islands next time.