This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. VI, No. 9, April 2-8, 2006
Negros Media Demands Broadcaster’s Delisting from AFP Order of Battle
Various media organizations in
Bacolod City have condemned the inclusion of Julius Mariveles, news director of
DYEZ Aksyon Radyo-Bacolod in the list of top communist and New People’s Army
leaders allegedly drawn up by the Armed Forces of the Philippines’ Central
Command (AFP Cencom). BY
KARL G. OMBION BACOLOD City – Various
media organizations here have condemned the inclusion of Julius Mariveles, news
director of DYEZ Aksyon Radyo-Bacolod in the list of top communist and New
People’s Army leaders allegedly drawn up by the Armed Forces of the Philippines’
Central Command (AFP Cencom). Various media groups
Article 3 Alliance, Negros Press Club, Negros Media Council for Press Freedom (NMCPF),
Correspondents, Broadcasters and Reporters Association-Action News Service
(Cobra-ANS), Liga Journalista, and Congress of Active Media Practitioners (CAMP)
-- have demanded that Mariveles’ name be immediately deleted from the AFP’s
order of battle. The groups demand that the
AFP assure his safety and the unhampered practice of his profession. They also
urged the intelligence services of both the military and police to “rigorously
review” their orders of battle to prevent such a recurrence and consult the
media about the veracity of their accusations against journalists. The Article 3 Alliance
revealed that the list, which is dated the first semester of 2005, identifies
Mariveles as secretary-general of the Negros chapter of the party-list group
Bayan Muna (Toiling Masees) and among purported leaders of the revolutionary
movement on Negros. It is therefore a
relatively recent list, the alliance stated. The alliance however,
stated that Mariveles has been a full-time media practitioner since 2002, but
admitted that he used to be secretary-general of the Negros chapter of Bagong
Alyansang Makabayan (Bayan or New Patriotic Alliance), not Bayan Muna.
The allince further stated
that it has reason to believe that the continued inclusion of Mariveles’ name in
the list is more than a case of mere oversight. “We see no way the military
could have overlooked this simple fact since, in the practice of his profession,
Mr. Mariveles regularly interviewed ranking military and police officers on
Negros,” it stated. “The only conclusion we can
draw, therefore, the statement added, is that Mr. Mariveles' continued inclusion
in the list is either a case of, at best, incompetence or negligence, which
simply confirms the derisive description of military intelligence as an
oxymoron, or a deliberate targeting of a journalist the military considers a
nuisance or, worse, an enemy of the state. “Given the continued
threats against press freedom from this administration since even before
President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo declared her short-lived state of national
emergency and the growing list of activists murdered in the country, we worry
that, unless rectified immediately, the inclusion of Mr. Mariveles in the list
constitutes a continuing clear and present danger to his life and to his
unhampered practice of our profession.” The alliance stressed that,
aside from Mr. Mariveles, there are also other legal personalities included in
the list. “While they may not be part of the media community, we do worry about
the implication of their continued inclusion in the list for civil liberties and
the rule of law,” it concluded. Bulatlat © 2006 Bulatlat
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