This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 46, January 1-7, 2006
Yearend Report
Another Murderous Year for Philippine Media
Even
as media killings remain unsolved and harassments continue, 13 more Filipino
journalists were killed in 2005 and several instances of harassment and
intimidation were recorded. BY
JHONG DELA CRUZ As 2005 drew to a close,
Filipino journalists agreed the Macapagal-Arroyo administration failed to
protect them with 12 journalists killed and several cases of harassments
recorded. Previous media killings also remain unsolved. “This has been one of the
worst years,” said Carlos Conde of the National Union of Journalist of the
Philippines (NUJP). Worst forecast Earlier in the year, the
International Federation of Journalist (IFJ) predicted that 2005 will turn out
to be worse than 2004 in its report titled “A Dangerous Profession: Press
Freedom Under Fire in the Philippines.” According to the NUJP, 17
journalists were killed during the Aquino administration, 15 under Ramos, five
under Estrada and 39 under Arroyo. This situation prompted the New York-based
Committee to Protect Journalist (CPJ) to declare the Philippines the “most
murderous country for journalists” in 2004 next to war-torn
Iraq. On December 1, DYDD
reporter George Benaojan reporter Bantay Balita columnist in Talisay
City, Cebu, was shot dead by a still unidentified attacker. Benaojan was the
third journalist in the Philippines to be killed in only two weeks. The latest to be killed was
Robert Namoya, cameraman of the television network ABS-CBN. Namoya was shot by
motorcycle riding men near the station’s gate in Quezon City Dec. 28. The killing of Namoya
brought to 12 the number of journalist killed in the country this year, 75th
since 1986 and the 39th since President Arroyo assumed office in
January 2001. Conde said that what made
this year worse than 2004 was the administration’s decision to railroad the
passage of the anti-terrorism bill which is seen as a threat to civil liberties
including those of journalists. Conde added that Arroyo’s speech telling media
“to shed its bad boy image” has sent a chilling effect on journalists. Not surprisingly, the NUJP
has called Arroyo’s term “the worst administration in the history of the country
in so far as the killing of journalist is concerned.” Death threats and
censorship In August 2005, IFJ called
on the government to investigate a death threat received by Glenda Gloria,
managing editor of a Newsbreak magazine. “Considering the terrible
record of ruthless and deadly attacks against journalists in the Philippines,
the Government must recognize the seriousness of death threats against
journalists and investigate these incidents,” said the IFJ. “If the Government
ignores these threats, it will be sending these criminals a message of impunity.
The Government must put an end to the current environment of intimidation and
violence, and take action against these criminals.” Aside from death threats,
censorship of media establishments happened in 2005. Mayor Jose Galario has
revoked the license of Radio Mindanao Network’s DXVR in Valencia due to
“unfriendly broadcast.” DXMV-Radyo Ukay was also ordered closed by Galario. He
also filed multiple libel charges against RMN commentator Zaldy Ocon.
Gagging the press IFJ noted that the timing
of attempts by the Macapagal-Arroyo administration to muzzle the media was
evident at the height of controversies plaguing the presidency, particularly
calls for her ouster and accusations of corruption. Filipino journalists were
said to have been excluded at times from government press briefings. There were
also cases when their questions were screened before the briefings. Members of
the Foreign Correspondents Association of the Philippines (FOCAP) in one
Malacañang press conference were denied entry and the slots were limited to 10
chosen reporters who first filled out cue cards with their questions. “The Filipino government is
excluding journalists and news organizations that they deem critical of the
Arroyo administration. They are attempting to avoid answering the hard questions
and we have to ask why?” IFJ said. “This is a blatant manipulation of the media
and it must stop.” Pushing the envelope The Arroyo administration
is likely to push the envelope early next year by passing into law the
anti-terrorism bill, said Conde. “This could be the darkest
day for Philippine media,” he said forecasting that a worst-case scenario is in
store for working journalists should the bill be enacted in its present form. “Arroyo is feeling
vindicated because of economic improvements…she might use this to legitimize all
her actions and policies including passing the bill,” he said. Concerned media groups
including the NUJP deemed the bill a “threat” to civil liberties. Earlier, NUJP
was perceived by the government as an “enemy of the state” in an official
document prepared by the military. The government also confirmed some media
practitioners are under military surveillance. In October, the House and
Senate Committees on Justice approved their respective consolidated versions of
the bill. Critics dismissed the bill
as vague and open to abuse. It also violates the constitutional rights to
privacy, free speech, freedom of assembly and association, allows illegal
exercise of police power. It was considered unnecessary as problems supposedly
addressed are already covered by existing laws. Killer democracy Lawyer Neri Colmenares said
the bill’s definition of terrorism is vague, describing it as “a premeditated,
actual use of violence or force against persons, or force or by any other means
of destruction perpetrated against properties, environment, with the intention
of creating or sowing a state of danger, panic, fear or chaos to the general
public, group of persons or a segment thereof, or of coercing or intimidating
the government to do or abstain from doing an act.” The journalists’ coverage
of activities by perceived enemies of the state could result in a lifetime
imprisonment and a P10-million ($183,183.73, based on an exchange rate of P54.59
per US dollar) fine as vague concepts of “facilitating, contributing to and
promoting” terrorism are included in sections 6 and 7 of the proposed House
bill. Maintaining links with
suspected terrorists and reporting about false terrorist acts are similarly
sanctioned in the bill. “The bill will give birth
to a kind of media that serve as mouthpiece of the state,” Colmenares said.
“Those who fail to disclose acts of terrorism shall suffer a penalty of six
years imprisonment, a provision that shall disrupt work routines of media
practitioners as they are required to report first, not to their editors, but to
the police.” NUJP labeled the bill a
“disregard to a very basic democratic principle…that any person is innocent
until proven guilty. In effect, the anti-terrorism bill would allow a small
group of people to short-circuit democratic legal processes and cast as wide a
net as possible to justify full-scale attacks on civil liberties.” NUJP denounced insinuations
that media coverage of the roots and consequences of injustice backs terrorism
and that the media cannot be blamed for conflicts that have their roots in
injustice in the country. It reiterated that a free
press has its role in resolving long-standing conflicts and that the measure
would only curtail civil liberties as “in the provisions of anti-terrorism bill
lie the death of democracy,” it said. Arming journalists as
the answer? Some media practitioners
have given up on the government’s handling of journalists’ killings and opted to
arm themselves for much-needed security. NUJP reiterated that the
move would not solve the problem, and would instead aggravate it as it would
directly invite their perpetrators to legitimize their intent. “Many of those who were
killed were in fact armed,” it said adding:
“Encouraging journalists to arm themselves is a virtual admission by
law-enforcement authorities of how inutile they are against those who seek to
silence the press in this country.” “The killings of
journalists are a symptom of a deeper problem of governance rooted in the
failure of the justice system to truly protect the very citizens whose rights
and lives it is supposed to defend,” it said. The IFJ likewise denounced
the move. “The gun culture – turning
journalists into combatants – is contributing to the escalating violence
directed towards journalists.” Violent culture A widespread culture of
violence being tolerated and even condoned by Philippine government officials
may have compounded the issues of struggling journalists in the country,
according to IFJ and NUJP. A mission led by the groups
early this year found instances when senior government officials, including
mayors in two major cities in the south of the country, openly supported the use
of death squads in dealing with unruly elements in their towns, said Australian
representative Gerard Noonan. "When such a culture is
allowed to flourish at an official level, it is little wonder that aggrieved
local strongmen or political figures turn to assassins to get even with the
media," Noonan said. "The IFJ treats this matter as one of utmost seriousness.
It is completely unacceptable in a country with democratic credentials like the
Philippines." NUJP saw that poor working
conditions made journalists more vulnerable to such attacks. "The vast numbers
of journalists are receiving a pittance or nothing at all for their work. They
are being exploited and sometimes forced into conflict-of-interest situations,"
NUJP said. "They do not receive safety support from their employees either," she
added. “These killings are not
just a terrible pain to bear for media in the Philippines,” said IFJ President
Christopher Warren. “They are part of a pattern of continuing violence against
journalists around the world.” For his part, Conde said
his group would continue pressing the government to junk a planned
anti-terrorism bill. He stressed that the NUJP, along with other media
alliances, would opt to call for Arroyo’s ouster. “Even a freedom fund worth
P2 million ($36,636.75) reportedly handed by the government would not keep our
fears at bay…much more the families of those who were felled by bullets of state
instruments,” he said. Bulatlat
Name
Media outfit
Date killed
1. Edgar Amoro
Freelance
broadcaster /
Pagadian
City
2005 - Feb. 2
2. Arnulfo Villanueva
Asian Star Express
Balita / Naic,
Cavite
2005 - Feb. 28
3. Romeo Sanchez
DZNL, Baguio
2005 - March 9
4. Marlene Garcia Esperat
The Midland Review /
Tacurong City
2005 - March 24
5. Klein Cantoneros
DXAA-FM / Dipolog
City
2005 - May 4
6. Philip Agustin
Starline Times
Recorder / Dingalan, Aurora
2005 - May 10
7. Rolando Morales
DWMD-Radio Mindanao
Network, South Cotabato
2005 – July 3
8. Ricardo “Ding” Uy
DZRS-AM
Sorsogon
City
2005 – Nov. 18
9. Robert Ramos
Katapat / Laguna
2005 – Nov. 21
10. George Benaojan
Bantay Balita
/ Talisay
City,
Cebu
2005 – Dec. 1
11. Luciano Razon
107.9 FM Radyo Natin
/ Paete, Laguna
2005 – Dec. 22
12. Robert Namoya
ABS-CBN / Quezon
City
2005 – Dec. 28 © 2006 Bulatlat
■
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12 killed,
harassments continue
Bulatlat