MENU
![]() |
Meg Shedley, 89, with some of her local friends and 100 others, take in the dedication. She (and her husband, Don) donated a 200-acre farm for the original facility in 1997. Gospel broadcasts launched in 2003. The new 1,200-acre site, leased since 2006, is about a mile from the original site, housing transmitters and antennas used to broadcast the gospel in 26 languages across the Asia Pacific Region. |
"Yes, the story of HCJB Global-Australia is truly a story of what God has done," he told a crowd at the dedication of the ministry's new international broadcast site in Kununurra, adjacent to the original site that had been used to broadcast since 2003. "And we want to give Him all the glory," he commented, referring to an Old Testament Bible verse, "See what God has done!" (Numbers 23:23, NIV).
Others urged him to abandon what was called in 1989 his "far-fetched" vision, foreseeing obstacles in acquiring radio licenses and land for the site. When potential donors were approached with the idea, they predicted problems finding staff and money for the project.
Programs Air in 26 Languages
![]() |
David Maindonald |
"It's reaching some of the most populous and least-reached places of the world-going into Japan, China, India, Bangladesh, Indonesia and Malaysia," Pederson said later in an audio report.
![]() |
Wayne Pederson (left) and Dale Stagg at the inauguration. |
A listener in Indonesia wrote, "Your station is totally different from any other I've ever known. It brings peace, joy and hope-things that have been lost in my life for quite a long time."
Multiple Challenges Overcome
Pederson outlined some of the trials encountered along the way. "Through many years of overcoming regulations, federal permissions, local clearances, financial challenges and power line difficulties, this station is now a reality," he said. Then he coupled those comments with explanations of bargains obtained to broadcast from the site.
![]() |
Unveiling a plaque which reads, "HCJB Australia International Broadcast Facility. Dedicated to the glory of God. 21st April 2013. 'So that all may hear' (Romans 10:14)." Left to right: Stephen Sutherland, Wayne Pederson, Dale Stagg, David Maindonald, Derek Kickbush. |
Also attending the ceremony were HCJB Global Asia Pacific Executive Director Ty, Australian Member of Parliament Barry Haase and Meg Shedley, who turns 90 this year. Back in 1997 when the Australian government still wasn't issuing international broadcast licenses, she and her husband, Don, donated a 200-acre farm in Kununurra in faith that it could serve as an international shortwave site.
"This site has so many advantages," John Stanley had said of the site at that time. An engineer who helped to staff the mission's shortwave site in Ecuador decades ago, Stanley serves as an international broadcasting consultant.
![]() |
Volunteers help erect a tower for the curtain antenna in 2008. |
"The laws of Australia were changed, and we were given not one but four international broadcasting licenses, and we had to be on air within two years," he recounted. "Suddenly the dream of international broadcasting came alive again."
Launching International Broadcasts
An HC100 (100,000-watt) shortwave transmitter that had been shipped from Ecuador to the U.S. was in turn shipped to Australia just as U.S. dockworkers went on strike. In late 2002 it arrived in Australia, where station staff needed every bit of time to get it operational in time for the deadline. Negotiations with authorities resulted in more than $100,000 in duty and taxes being waived. The shortwave station went on the air on Jan. 5, 2003, with five hours of programming to the South Pacific. A month later the South Asia broadcasts to India began.
![]() |
Grilling lunch on the "barbie" for guests at the dedication. |
In 2005 a high-quality curtain antenna was purchased from a radio station in Croatia for a quarter of its market value and erected three years later. In 2006 a second HC100 was shipped to Australia. The 21-year lease from the Western Australia government for the 1,200-acre site was also signed in 2006. In 2011 the high-tension power line was installed along with a donated parabolic antenna from Ecuador.
In 2012 one of the existing transmitters was relocated to the new transmitter building, and broadcasts began at the new site in July 2012. In March 2013 broadcasts commenced using both 100-kw transmitters.
![]() |
Radio listeners in India hear a program in their native tongue. |
"A third HC100 coming in a few months will be digital, enabling us to reach a whole new audience with the clear, digital sounds of shortwave," added Pederson. "[Our Australian partners] are dedicated people, and they've done a great job. You should see this impressive facility."
"Our broadcast site gives us great access to the Asia Pacific Region," Stagg recounted. "Our region contains more than 4 billion people and many of the world's unreached people groups."
Source: HCJB Global-Australia