This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 35, October 9-15, 2005
MEDIA WATCH
UP Profs, NUJP Hit Military, Police Harassment of Lensman A
photojournalist was the first to arrive at the scene of an attack allegedly
perpetrated by the New People’s Army in Tarlac. Instead of having a scoop,
however, he ended up being accused by the military and police of being in
cahoots with the NPA. He was then interrogated and briefly detained. What’s
worse, he was prevented from doing his job to inform the people of what
happened. BY
ALEXANDER MARTIN REMOLLINO Thirteen professors of the
University of the Philippines College of Mass Communication (UP CMC) led by Dean
Nicanor Tiongson condemned the harassment of a photojournalist last October 2 by
military and police elements. In a statement, the 13 professors called on the
military and the police to “respect the freedom of the press and to allow
journalists to freely practice their profession.” Rene Dilan of The Manila
Times was taking pictures of the damage inflicted by armed men on the office
of Globe Telecom along the Lapaz-Santa Rosa Road in Maliwalu village, Tarlac
City when he was accosted by around 20 elements of the Philippine Army and the
Philippine National Police (PNP). Dilan said he was
questioned about his presence at the site. “They asked me why I was there when
the gunfight had just ended,” he said. He said he was accused of being in
cahoots with the New People’s Army (NPA) which the military and police suspected
to be behind the attack. He was then asked to turn over his equipment. He explained that an
anonymous source called The Manila Times office that an attack had taken
place in Tarlac City, prompting the office to send him there immediately.
The military and police, he
said, did not believe he got to the site so fast without knowing about the
planned attack, to which he replied that travel time had been cut short in the
absence of traffic on a weekend. They, however, insisted he could not have
reached the area so fast without prior knowledge of the NPA’s plan. “They suspected me of being
a member of the NPA,” he related. “They ordered me to stop taking pictures.” He was then taken into
custody and detained from 12:30 to 2:00 a.m. on Oct. 3. His memory card was also
confiscated, he said. “The action of the military
and police is clearly a direct assault on freedom of the press,” the October 7
statement by the UP CMC professors read. “It shows utter ignorance of the
workings of the journalism profession. Such red-baiting tactics also reflect the
military’s and police’s perception that journalists – particularly those
critical of government policies and programs – are part of a so-called grand
conspiracy to destabilize the government as while they are only concerned with
objectively reporting events.” The professors who signed
the statement called for an impartial investigation into the case and a public
apology by the perpetrators of the harassment to Dilan and The Manila Times
at the soonest possible time. “Otherwise, the suspicion
will grow that the government does not value press freedom, or worse, that it
prefers its suppression by not doing anything to protect it,” the UP CMC
professors stated. The National Union of
Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP) also condemned the incident, according to
Jose Torres Jr., who chairs the group’s Committee for the Protection of
Journalists. Bulatlat © 2005 Bulatlat
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