Radio Nordsee International
(RNI) also known as Radio North Sea International
in English and Radio
Noordzee Internationaal in Dutch, was a European offshore radio station, run by the Swiss
firm Mebo
Telecommunications, jointly owned by Swiss engineer, Edwin Bollier, and his business partner,
Erwin Meister. RNI broadcast
for fewer than five years in the 1970s and, courting both disaster
and success, made a modest financial profit.
After RNI ceased broadcasting in 1974, Mebo evolved into a supplier
of specialist electronic equipment.
In the 1980s, Mebo's links with the
Gaddafi regime in Libya
would cause
Meister and Bollier's firm great difficulties, culminating with
their alleged involvement in the December 1988 Lockerbie bombing.
Radio Gloria
In 1968 Erwin Meister and Edwin Bollier intended to broadcast as
Radio Gloria from the former
Radio London ship,
Galaxy. On 2 July 1968 the
German government scuppered their plans by passing a law
banning off-shore broadcasting. The
Gloria project
collapsed. Meister and Bollier decided to buy their own vessel and
set up a radio station. They renamed their first ship
Mebo, then
Mebo I, and finally
Angela.
Fitted with studios and transmitting equipment,
Angela was
found too small for broadcasting but too big for regular use as a
tender. However,
Angela supplied
Mebo II when off
the English coast.
Mebo II
Silvretta renamed
Mebo II
Originally
Silvretta, and built in Slikkerveer
in the Netherlands
in 1948, the 630-tonne vessel was 8.85 metres wide,
3.25 metres deep and 53 metres long. In 1969 Mebo
Telecommunications purchased
Silvretta, fitted her out as
a floating radio station, and renamed her
Mebo II. Since Angela was too big to tender
Mebo II off The Netherlands
coast, RNI used a smaller vessel, called Trip
Tender, the same vessel as Radio London (when she was called
Offshore 1.) The psychedelically-painted Mebo II carried
a MW transmitter at 105 kilowatts (more than twice the 50 kW TXs used
by Radio London and Radio Caroline),
though in practice it was operated at 60 kW or
less.
One of five
RCA-built prototype transmitters,
and the only one still in service, it rarely if ever broadcast at
full power, and had the highest power rating of any ship-based
radio station.
Mebo II also had
SW and
FM
transmitters, the best fitted of all ship-based radio stations,
able simultaneously to broadcast four different streams on four
different channels.
Arguably the most popular of all ship-based radio stations, RNI's
staff were trained to standards that still, in recordings, convey a
palpable warmth, over 30 years after the station's closure. RNI's
theme,
Man of Action, was also popular.
On 23
January 1970, Mebo II began
broadcasts from the Dutch
coast, in
English and German. When regular broadcasting began on 11
February 1970 it was more popular in the United Kingdom than the
Netherlands.
On 23 March 1970 Mebo
II sailed to the East coast of England
, arriving at 09:00 on 24 March 1970 and anchoring
in international waters, five miles from Clacton
.
Jamming
The
Labour government in Britain
began jamming
Mebo II's MW signal at 20:30 on 15
April 1970. RNI responded with pro-
Conservative party political
messages for the
general election on 18
June 1970. On 13 May 1970, RNI responded to complaints about
interference by changing its MW channel to 1230 kHz (244
metres). This improved reception but was adjacent to the pop music
service of
BBC Radio One on
1214 kHz (247 metres).
Jamming followed five days later, causing
interference to BBC Radio as well as RNI,
especially in Kent
, south-east
England
.
Radio Caroline International
On 13 June 1970, five days prior to election day,
Radio
North Sea International changed its name to
Radio Caroline International, and launched a
propaganda campaign in support of the Conservative party. The name
change and political campaign were supported by
Radio Caroline's founder
Ronan O'Rahilly. Listeners were told that
their freedom to listen to the radio station of their choice was
under threat and that if the
Labour
party were returned to power then the station would close:
their vote should therefore be
Conservative, the only party that
supported commercial radio.
Ronan
O'Rahilly headed the pro-
Conservative party campaign on land,
including a double-decker bus and posters depicting
Harold Wilson as China's
Chairman Mao.
They believed
Conservative
promises to restore Free Radio would mean an end to the jamming.
Conservative party policy
was to establish
local
land-based commercial radio in the UK.
At a 'Fight for Free Radio' rally the weekend before the election,
Conservative party
loudspeaker-vans were being used to urge participants to 'Vote
Conservative and fight for free radio'. The Conservatives went on
to win, and there is evidence that the
Caroline and RNI political campaigns made a
difference to the result of the
UK's 1970 general
election.
Reversion to RNI
Two days after the election, the station reverted to its original
RNI name.
Because jamming of transmissions continued,
however, Mebo II returned to
the
Netherlands
coast on 23
July 1970.
The British government jammed
Mebo
II's broadcasts with tones, usually an 800 Hz heterodyne
supplemented from time-to-time with a pulsed beep (whistle and "pip
pip").
Norway
's
interference with RNI on 6215.0 kHz was explained thus:
"this is a transmission from the Norwegian
coast station Rogaland Radio
operating in single side band mode, upper side band, with a carrier
frequency of 6215.0 kHz.
The purpose of this transmission is to clear the
channel of unauthorized and out of band broadcasting, to improve
reception conditions for ships wishing to communicate with coast
stations on this frequency or on adjacent maritime
channels."
Paul
Harris's book Broadcasting from the High Seas, published
in 1976, suggests the UK government suspected RNI's shortwave
equipment was being used to send coded messages
to unfriendly countries, in particular to the German
Democratic Republic
(GDR). A collage of 1970s archive material
related to the suspicion that RNI might have been a front for GDR
spying activities as a
numbers
station concludes with a
BBC
Radio Humberside interview on 30 August 2004 in which RNI's DJ
Steve Merike, a bizarre choice to
"disprove" the rumours, sought to dispel the spy ship theory.
Harris also claimed RNI's joint owner, Edwin Bollier, vowed to take
revenge on the British government because he felt RNI had been
singled out for jamming. Harris's theories are controversial and
there has never been any hard evidence to support them.
Attempted hijacking

Kees Manders
Larry Tremaine with Andy Archer
On 12
August 1970, Kees Manders, a nightclub owner involved with Radio
Veronica
, announced
he had become commercial director of RNI. But RNI's managing
director, Larry Tremaine, said nothing had been agreed with
Manders. Edwin Bollier and Edwin Meister had invited Manders to
start a Dutch service from the
Mebo
II, and offered him a directorship in RNI, but as soon as
Manders leaked the story, Meister and Bollier withdrew the offer. A
few weeks later, on Saturday, 29 August 1970, a salvage tug named
Husky was spotted approaching
Mebo
II at about 13:30. Accompanying the tug was a launch, the
Viking, aboard which were Kees Manders with a woman and a
child. In the studio,
DJ Andy Archer
interrupted his programme to broadcast a series of announcements
appealing to listeners to contact RNI's offices and inform them of
what appeared to be a threatening situation:
- "Seven minutes now away from two o'clock, and we have to
apologize to you for interrupting our normal programme schedule
with these urgent messages, but as you can probably appreciate,
something rather drastic has happened. Or they're trying to make
something happen which we won't stand for. We're refusing to allow
anybody this radio ship, and if you've just joined us, perhaps
you'd like to be put in the picture, that a tug has come alongside,
along with a person by the name of Kees Manders, who apparently is
a well known figure in Holland, and he is trying to take the ship
away. Our Captain has only allowed him on board, and nobody else,
and that will remain that way. We're not going to let anybody else
on board the ship, only Mr Manders, to hear what he's got to say,
but Radio North Sea International will stay broadcasting until we
receive a definite order from our Head office in Zurich. So if anybody is listening in Zurich, or in
London
, or in our
office in The
Hague
, in Scheveningen,
perhaps they would like to do something, perhaps send a boat out,
or perhaps try to make contact with us on the short-wave. .
. Well, the situation is. . . none of us are sure what's happening
at the moment but this certainly isn't an authorized tug. . . we
have no tugs. . . the Mebo is in no need of a tug because
we have perfectly good engines. . . The Captain allowed one of the
men on board, but he refused to let any more on board, which is his
prerogative. . . and this is the way it's going to stay until we
receive details or instructions from our head office. So, once more
we'd like to make a call to our head office in Zurich, or if anyone
is listening in our London office, on in The Hague, perhaps you
could try and get a message out to us on the short-wave link."
Spangles Muldoon reported:
- "It seems they're gonna spray water onto the antenna, which
apart from tripping out our transmitter, would give whoever did it
a very lethal shock. . .. So by all means, spray the aerial with
water, if it makes you feel any better."
Andy Archer:
- ". . . and the banging you can hear in the background is that
we are taking all security precautions, and locking up the hatches
to save anybody from coming down into the studio itself. So once
more we must tell you that there's a raid taking place at the
moment. . . an unauthorized raid, and we're doing our best to stop
everybody coming on board, so all we ask for our friends on the
shore. . . to send out help to us. . ."
Manders' demands were refused. He returned to the
Viking
issuing a threat to cut the anchor chain and tow the
Mebo
II back to port. Crewmen on board the
Husky made
ready to use a water cannon on the radio mast, but decided against,
presumably having heard the message that in doing so, they would
risk
electrocution. While Archer and
Muldoon continued to broadcast, others on board armed themselves
with knives and petrol bombs and prepared to repel boarders.
Switchboards in London, The Hague, and Zurich received calls from
listeners. Station owner Erwin Meister arrived on the scene on
board a fast launch, followed by the
Eurotrip tender and
other craft.
Husky and
Viking immediately left,
and were never seen again. Later that day
van Ness, a
frigate of the
Royal Netherlands
Navy stood by. As the day drew to a close, managing director of
RNI, Larry Tremaine, went on air with this statement:
- "Ladies and gentlemen, I am very sorry for the inconvenience
today that you have had, but unfortunately we have had problems out
here. And, I'm glad the disk jockeys have done their part in
keeping you informed, and that's what RNI plans to do. . .
I'm out
here right now with the owner of Radio North Sea International,
from Mebo AG in Zurich, Switzerland
and we hope we don't have too many problems.
At the moment, the ships have pulled off. But we are sure, as they
have told us, that they are coming back. They had brought a child,
and a woman, on one of their ships, to kinda deter us from doing
anything to them. Although it is our intention. . . [to defend
ourselves]. As the owner of the station has said to the Captain of
the trip that brought us out here, only the agent from the shipping
company in Holland, myself, and the owner Mr Erwin Meister has come
out to the Mebo. Many people wanted to come out to help us. We told
them they could not come on our ship, we are not interested in any
fights, we are not interested in any deaths at sea. This station is
not around to make trouble, this station is around to provide you
with musical entertainment. This is the reason that we asked that
only the shipping agent, Mr Erwin Meister, and myself, Larry
Tremaine, to come out here to the Mebo II to see what the
problem was. We have contacted our attorneys, our
solicitors in Holland
, and we are trying to do our utmost to do the best
for you. So please stay tuned. Thank you all very much for
lighting up the switchboard at the Grand Hotel. We appreciate that
very much. Also thank you very much for lighting up the switchboard
in Zurich. As I understand, all the lines were flooded, showing
your continued support for Radio North Sea International. We are
not saying that at this time, that we do not still need help,
because at this time they have pulled away. But we are sure that
they are coming back. Mr Manders has no right to take this ship.
There has never been a contract signed with him. There are no
agreements between him and Radio North sea International. This I
can assure our listeners implicitly, there is no agreement, and
there is no reason for this action whatsoever. We are very sorry
for all this trouble, we are very sorry to interrupt music like
this. But you can understand our involved situation out here. We
will protect the Mebo II to the utmost. We will not leave
this ship, we are prepared for them although we do not want a
fight. We do not want any deaths, or anybody hurt at all. It went
so far as to tell them, when they planned to put water on the
transmitter, the disk jockeys, just by thinking of the people on
the ship, and not thinking of themselves, told them not to put
water on the transmitter, because it would kill everybody on the
tug boat. This we did not have to do, but we did it because we are
a music station. We are not around to injure or endanger any lives
whatsoever. So please stay tuned, if you wish to help, we want it.
But meanwhile, stay with us."
Radio silence
RNI
ceased broadcasting at less than 24 hours' notice at midday on 24
September 1970, in exchange for a payment of one million Dutch
Guilders (about £100,000) from Radio
Veronica
.
Mebo II remained at anchor in
international waters off
Scheveningen
in the Netherlands.
Back on the air
On Friday, 29 January 1971
Mebo II
recommenced broadcasts, on 220 metres MW and 48 metres SW, channels
the station would use until its forced closure in 1974. The station
identified itself on 14 February 1971, with the words,
- "this is a test transmission from Radio North Sea International
broadcasting on 220 meters medium wave band, that's 1367
kilocycles, and on Channel 44, that's 100 megacycles in the FM
band, and short wave at 6205 kilocycles in the European band. We're
very very pleased to have you around, may I cordially suggest that
you might like to call up your friends on the telephone and let
them know that Radio North Sea International is back, 220 on their
dial."
Regular English language programming restarted at 14:00 on Sunday,
21 February 1971. Dutch programming began on 6 March 1971.
The 1971 bombing
On Saturday, 15 May 1971 at 22:50 DJ Alan West interrupted his
regular English language program to say that there had been an
explosion and the ship was on fire:
- "Mayday, mayday, mayday, this is Radio North Sea International
from the Mebo II at exactly 52°11' latitude, 40°16'
longitude, four miles from the coast of Scheveningen, Holland, one
mile from the radio ship Norderney, Veronica. We are having to
abandon ship very soon, the bridge and the engine room are on fire,
the fire is taking control of the ship. The fire was caused by a
bomb thrown on board from a small motor ship, repeat, small motor
launch with an outboard motor. We don't know who it belongs to, but
it certainly bombed us while it was here. This is the Mebo
II on fire, we need help immediately. The Mebo II is
now abandoning ship."
At 23:40 the transmitters were switched off and
Mebo II abandoned. The following morning, at
02:30,
Mebo II recommenced
broadcasting, closing at 03:00 as normal, and normal Dutch language
programming began at 06:00 on Sunday 16 May 1971.
Spangles Muldoon on 16 May 1971:
- "Following the fire on board the radio ship Mebo II
last night, three men have been arrested in Amsterdam. The men have
been charged with planting a bomb on board the ship which started
an intense fire which has burned out most of the after-ship’s
structure. The bomb exploded last night at 22:50 hours and started
a fire instantly. After a few minutes it was believed the fire was
under control, but suddenly, it worsened. Members of the crew and
broadcasting staff attempted to put it out. A Mayday call was put
out in English & Dutch and for a while, members of the crew
left the ship for life-rafts. Eventually the tugboat
Eurotrip came alongside. . . the captain remained on
board. Within an hour of the explosion, two fire-fighting vessels
were alongside and putting out the fire which was, by that time,
raging throughout the whole of the stern of the ship. Other ships,
tugs, lifeboats and naval vessels also joined in the fire-fighting.
We would now like to thank all aboard those vessels for their
efforts and also our thanks to all those on land who might have
heard us last night. We shall not forget what you have done. A
quick report on the condition of the ship. The whole of the
after-end is a write-off, construction-wise, but we are still
afloat and far from unsafe. The whole of the forward end, including
the disk jockeys quarters, the studios, newsroom and transmission
hall and AC generators, is intact and undamaged. The Mebo
II is in no danger of sinking. We shall continue to broadcast
as normal."
Arrests and prosecution
On 17 May
1971, 48-year-old Norbert Jurgens, the advertising manager at
Radio
Veronica
was arrested
and questioned by Dutch Police, and the following day Veronica
director Bull Verweij was also held. Verweij appeared on
Netherlands television to tell how he had paid a man 12,000 Dutch
Guilders (approximately £1,100) to force
Mebo II into territorial waters.
Then once inside the three-mile limit, the ship would have been
liable to arrest or confiscation by creditors. In September 1971,
all five suspects re-appeared in court, where it became clear how
the plan had been developed and implemented. According to one of
the three frogmen, Jan P, their motivation was money and adventure.
Besides they had heard that RNI was involved with espionage for the
eastern bloc. However, Judge Mr van't Veer ruled,
- "These are gangster methods, totally inadmissible."
Although Meister and Bollier did not want to prosecute the
offenders, all five were sentenced to one year in prison.
The
bombing of RNI convinced the Netherlands
government that it was time to outlaw the supply
from the Dutch mainland of offshore
radio stations on the high seas. The Marine Offences Act
came into force on 1 September 1974.
RNI 2
On September 30, 1972 Radio Veronica changed its frequency from
1562 kHz (192 metres) to 557 kHz (537 metres, announced
as 538), announcing that it would close at 12:30 PM and reopen on
its new frequency at 1:00 PM. A moment after the station closed
listeners were surprised to hear "Man of Action" on 1562 kHz.
This was followed by announcements in both English and Dutch by RNI
DJ
Tony Allan acknowledging Veronica's
12-year history and welcoming listeners to the new sound of "RNI
2". At 1:00 RNI 2 relayed part of Veronica's reopening broadcast.
Thereafter for several days RNI 2 carried separate programming from
the main AM and FM service but then closed without warning, never
to return.
The station's management claimed that RNI 2 was set up to prove
that RNI could broadcast additional frequencies in case of
emergency, although the nature of that emergency was never
specified. Sceptics claimed that it was just an attempt to grab
some of Veronica's audience.
With the launch of RNI 2, the
Mebo
II became only the second radio ship to broadcast two
separate mediumwave stations, the first being the
Olga Patricia
/ Laissez Faire which broadcast
Swinging Radio England and
Britain Radio and their successors in 1966-7.
Subsequently the Radio Caroline ships Mi Amigo and
Ross
Revenge
would be the only other vessels used to
broadcast two mediumwave channels simultaneously.
Final transmission
From June 1971 until the end of August 1974 Radio North Sea
International was a regular and reliable broadcaster from
international waters, four miles from Holland. The main MW
transmissions continued at about 50 kW on 1367 kHz,
shortwave using 10 kW on 6205 kHz and VHF FM on
100 MHz. Dutch programs, which were mostly taped on land, were
extended eventually to 20:00
Central European Time (CET). Programs
in English extended at the weekends from 03:00 until 06:00, when
Dutch language programming began. The second 10 kW AM TX was
tested on medium wave 773 kHz, and for a period as RNI 2, a
second stream on 1562 kHz, in addition to the main stream on
1367 kHz, and intended to assure advertisers that, if need
arose,
Mebo II could continue
transmissions on another frequency. The main English language
closed at midnight on 30/31 August 1974, and the Dutch
transmissions ceased on 31 August 1974 at 20:00.
RNI presenters (English Service)
- Tony Allan
- "Daffy" Don Allen
- Andy Archer
- Robin Adcroft as "Robin Banks"
- Terry Davis
- Arnold Layne
- Brian Mackenzie
- Roger "Twiggy" Day
RNI jingles
Thirty one of the original RNI jingles in English, Dutch and German
are recorded in
RealAudio and can be
downloaded
here.
More Radio Northsea Jingles available here (mp3)
http://www.esatclear.ie/~cavalier/mp3/nova_full_jingles.mp3
Destination Libya
Gulf of Sidra - Libya's "territorial waters"
While the two vessels were laid up in Holland, both were fully
refitted. Early in 1977,
Angela and
Mebo II were sold to Libya.
They sailed, each
with a crew of nine, for Libya
, arriving
Tripoli
on 9 February 1977. Mebo II was renamed
El Fatah, and
Angela was renamed
Almasira.
El Fatah
then broadcast as
Radio Jamharia with programmes such as
the
Arab Voice,
Libya International in English
and the
Holy Koran. This continued until 1980, when Heinz
Hurter,
Edwin Bollier's second wife's
brother was the only Swiss national to remain aboard.
One of RNI's former
DJs, Robin Banks (né Adcroft,
not to be confused with DJ
Robin Banks),
accompanied the vessels to Libya, and stayed with them as a
transmitter engineer until 1980.
The Almasira and the El
Fatah were said to have been used as target practice by the
Libyan Navy in the 1980s, and were sunk in the Gulf of Sidra
, Mediterranean Sea
.
Later broadcasts
For two brief periods in 1999 and 2000, RNI successfully re-started
its broadcasts.
In August 1999, using a former Trinity House
light vessel (LV18) moored off Clacton on
Sea
, RNI's Mebo III broadcast on the 190m band
at 1575 kHz. Part of the proceeds from this RNI session
went to support the
Royal National Lifeboat
Institution (RNLI).
On April 11, 2000 Mebo III again
sprang to life for a six-week period, when it was moored at the Old
Railway Pier in Harwich
and broadcast to Tendring,
South Suffolk and "the world".
Edwin Bollier congratulated the
organisers of the RNI revival and said that as soon as the
Lockerbie trial was
completed, he intended to get "back into the offshore radio
business again".
Although the trial finished in January 2001, when
Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed Al
Megrahi was convicted of the bombing, and an appeal against
conviction was rejected in February 2002, there has been no sign
yet of any further offshore broadcasting activity by Bollier.
However, the Lockerbie case is not completed.
Megrahi has been
granted a second appeal
against conviction which is scheduled to take place in Scotland
's Court of Criminal Appeal
in 2009.
In November 2008 a
webradio RNI started its
broadcasts. This is an automated service with live programming on
Saturdays and Sundays in Dutch from 7am to 2pm and in English from
2pm to 1am, UK times.
References