This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 13, May 8-14, 2005
On World Press Freedom
Day
by Ronald B. Escanlar Nationwide commemoration Over 200 journalists joined
by lawmakers, students, human rights and Church groups converged at a Boy Scouts
jamboree monument at the intersection of Timog and Tomas Morato Avenues in
Quezon City. Aside from NUJP, the
participating organizations included the Metro Manila Radio Reporters
Organization, Defense Press Corps, Antonio Zumel Center for Press Freedom,
Philippine Center for Photojournalism, Press Photographers of the Philippines,
Center for Community Journalism, Freedom Fund for Filipino Journalists,
Capampangan in Media, Inc., Concerned Artists of the Philippines, College
Editors Guild of the Philippines and students of the University of the
Philippines. Meanwhile, members of Davao
Media commemorated World Press Freedom Day through a full siren-motorcade that
lasted 45 minutes around Davao City's major roads. The motorcade started at
Rizal Park, the convergence point of major street protests in the city and ended
at SM City Mall where a short program followed. "We are the first to speak
against the economic exploitation of workers, of the very low wages prevailing
in our region, but we are also victims of such condition," he said in a
gathering of journalists at SM mall, as fully-armed members of the police and
military watched. Members of the NUJP-Davao,
Kapisanan ng mga Brodkaster ng Pilipinas (KBP), local Philippine Information
Agency (PIA) office, and the Philippine National Police (PNP) Press Corps
gathered in the SM mall forum. Even Assistant Secretary
Efren Elbanbuena of the Philippine Information Agency (PIA) for south central
Mindanao, agreed that media reporters in Southern Mindanao receive salaries
lower than the basic minimum pay, based on an earlier media study. The press forum came after
the 45-minute motorcade, where NUJP streamers, saying "Don't gag the Press" and
"There can never be press freedom when journalists exist in condition of
corruption, poverty and fear" in big bold letters fluttered in one of the
convoy's 20 vehicles and caught the attention of Davaoeños along the city's
major thoroughfares. In Iloilo, journalists
formed a 100-meter human chain consisting of 80 persons, holding lighted
candles. In Cagayan de Oro City, the NUJP members, linked arms with the KBP, PNP
Press Corps, Cagayan de Oro Press Club and local CEGP chapters to form a similar
human chain. The activity was held at the Plaza Divisoria, from 6-8 p.m. In Baguio, the NUJP held a
forum on state of press freedom at the old chapel of Camp John Hay in Baguio
City last May 4. RP media as prey "Press freedom is fully
protected and media practitioners may ask the police for special protection if
their lives are under threat," Press Secretary Ignacio R. Bunye said. Before the day ended,
Cantoneros succumbed to seven gunshot wounds at the Dipolog Medical Center. "The killings will stop
only if the government proves that in this country, people cannot kill with
impunity," she added.
Related article:
Bills of
Suppression
By
Carole Jean Cupag
and Kristine Marie
Torres © 2004 Bulatlat
■
Alipato Publications Permission is granted to reprint or redistribute this article, provided its author/s and Bulatlat are properly credited and notified.
Philippine Media Grieve
Dancing flames crowned a small memorial circle in Quezon City as journalists
marked World Press Freedom Day on May 3 in black shirts. But barely an hour had
the occasion passed when another journalist succumbed in the line of duty:
hard-hitting commentator Klein Cantoneros of Dipolog City became the fourth
journalist to be killed this year, the 30th under President Gloria
Macapagal-Arroyo and the 67th since 1986.
Bulatlat
"Mahiya ka, Gloria!” (Shame on you, Gloria!)
Amid dancing flames at the rotunda of one of the metropolis' busiest
intersections, a journalist shouted in anguish over the unsolved murders of
colleagues – a grim reminder that in the Philippines, World Press Freedom Day is
not a celebration of life, but rather, a day of grieving for deaths of
colleagues and press freedom.
That same day, New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) declared
the Philippines as the "most murderous" country for media practitioners, an apt
addition to the country's title as the second most dangerous place for
journalists to work in, next to war-torn Iraq.
No less than the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ), which represents
over half a million journalists in more than a hundred nations, gave the
Philippines the second title. A most horrible title to a country supposedly the
bastion of press freedom in Southeast Asia.
Angry and mourning at the same time, members of the press wore black shirts that
read "Journalist 'To, Enemi op da state, daw o! (I am a Journalist. Enemy
of the State?)" and wore head and arm bands that read "Gag us not" and “Stop
killing journalists.”
"Mahiya ka, Gloria! (Shame on you, Gloria!)" shouted NUJP Secretary
General Carlos H. Conde, amid a black crowd carrying brown bamboo poles crowned
with red flames.
Radio Mindanao Network station manager Maximino Solis gave a media situationer
during the program. Solis said members of the media are not only faced with
threats to their lives, but threats as well on their economic conditions. He
said there could be no real press freedom while workers in the mass media go
hungry because of the prevailing very low wages in the industry.
CPJ marked World Press Freedom day with an analysis calling murder with impunity
as the most urgent threat against journalists globally. The committee studied
more than five years of death records since 2000.
The study found that 121 out of 190 media people who died on duty worldwide were
stalked and murdered for their work. Unfortunately, the killers had gone
unpunished in more than 85 percent of the media slayings, the CPJ said.
"By failing to investigate and punish the killers, the governments in these five
countries embolden all those who seek to silence the press through violence,"
CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper said in their May 2 statement.
Cooper, in conclusion, said that the problem was “enormous, but not
intractable.”
“Governments must recognize what's at stake is not only justice for
those murdered but also the collective right of society to be informed.
Journalists cannot do their jobs in a climate of violence and impunity,” Cooper
said.
Exaggerated, says Malacañang
The government labeled the CPJ report as "unfair and exaggerated."
He reiterated that law enforcement agencies, such as the PNP, are paying special
attention to the protection of journalists.
"Task Force Newsmen" has been organized by the PNP in an effort to protect
journalists and to probe into the killings of media practitioners.
According to the Office of the Press Secretary, the PNP Directorate for
Investigation and Detective Management had directed all police regional
directors to activate local task forces to help in the investigation and
prosecution of cases involving attacks on journalists.
Clear danger; no proof needed
A few hours after World Press Freedom Day, 32-year old broadcast journalist
Klein Cantoneros of DXAA in Dipolog City stepped out of the radio station and
was met by a hail of bullets.
According to the Philippine News Agency (PNA), Cantoneros, a hard-hitting
commentator, was on his way home when three men blocked his way and shot him.
Reports from the television station GMA said Cantoneros fought back with his own
gun.
In a statement, the National Union of Journalists of the Philippines (http://www.nujp.org)
said Cantoneros was the eighth journalist to come under attack this year. Three
were successfully slain – Edgar Amoro of Pagadian City, Arnulfo Villanueva of
Cavite, and Marlene Esperat of Sultan Kudarat. Meanwhile, Max Quindao of Tagum
City, Pablo Hernandez of the Metro Manila tabloid Bulgar, Alberto Martinez of
North Cotabato, and Nestor Seguismundo of DZXE, Ilocos Sur, survived
assassination but suffered serious wounds.
"The continuing attacks on Filipino media practitioners only prove that those
who seek to silence the press have utter contempt for the government," NUJP
President Inday Espina-Varona said.
The IFJ also strongly condemned the murder of Cantoneros, which hiked the grim
total of journalists murdered since the restoration of democracy in 1986 to 67.
"Those targeting journalists have complete disregard for the government and the
law because of a culture of impunity," IFJ President Christopher Warren said.
Warren added that attempts to silence journalists in the Philippines were
"escalating."
"The government must take immediate action to protect journalist from further
attacks," the IFJ president said.
A 'collective national shame'
During the re-launching of the Meet the Press breakfast forum in Manila,
Secretary Cerge Remonde, chief of the Government Media Group, said not enough
had been done on attacks against journalists.
"It's a big embarrassment. This (has become) a collective national shame,"
Remonde said in mixed Filipino and English.
The NUJP also criticized the government for its "cavalier, even dismissive,
attitude toward the killings," which the group says encourages more violence
against journalists.
"Either the administration is incredibly naïve or ignorant about what's
happening or it is woefully in denial," NUJP President Espina-Varona said at the
forum. Bulatlat