Another Dark Period for Philippine Media
By the NATIONAL
UNION OF JOURNALISTS OF THE PHILIPPINES (NUJP)
Posted by Bulatlat
This week marks
another dark period for press freedom in the Philippines, with the murder
of a colleague, the attempted murder of another and a libel case filed by
a governor against yet another.
Carmelo Palacios, 41, field reporter of the government-run Radyo ng Bayan,
was found dead in Sta. Rosa town, Nueva Ecija, Wednesday morning, his body
battered and shot in the chin. He was the 51st journalist to be killed
under the Arroyo administration's increasingly blood-drenched watch, and
the third this year.
Director Geary Barias of Task Force Usig has said there is reason to
believe the murder of Palacios was an offshoot of his being a
"hard-hitting, no nonsense reporter" and "anti-crime crusader."
A day after, Delfin Mallari Jr., correspondent of the Philippine Daily
Inquirer and the host of a local radio program and editor of the local
paper Ang Dyaryo Natin, was shot and wounded in an ambush in Lucena
City.
Colleague Johnny Glorioso of dzMM and Mallari's co-host and fellow editor,
said they have all the reason to believe the attempt on Mallari's life was
"politically motivated."
In Cebu City, Leo Lastimosa, station manager of local ABS-CBN radio, was
slapped with a libel suit by Cebu Governor Gwendolyn Garcia because of his
exposes on alleged scams committed during the preparations for the 12th
Association of Southeast Asian Nations there.
And in Albay, dzRH
reporter Jun Alegre was arrested yesterday and jailed over a 10-year-old
libel case.
The National Union of
Journalists of the Philippines condemns these latest assaults on our
colleagues and on press freedom as a whole.
Indeed, the assaults
on journalists and not just press freedom but freedom of expression and
the people's right to know as well, have been coming more often and
becoming more brazen.
In the case of media, while there remains no indication that this is part
of a broad, concerted effort, unlike the assaults on other sectors, the
fact nevertheless remains that the continued assaults on our colleagues
and on our freedom and liberties are abetted by a climate of impunity that
is the result of official inaction, antipathy and, in many cases, even
outright hostility.
This is borne out by last year's attempts by government to clamp down on
the media during the ill-conceived state of national emergency, the
multiple libel cases filed against 46 journalists by no less than the
president's husband, the sedition charges filed against the Tribune
and the comments from sundry government and security officials, notably
Justice Secretary Raul Gonzalez, that a number of our slain colleagues may
have deserved their fates -- as if there were any justification for
murder.
Again, as we mourn our fallen, see to our wounded and give succor to the
embattled, we challenge President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo to do the one
singular act that will prove that her administration is not abetting this
climate of impunity
that is steadily and with gathering speed and brazenness battering at our
most basic rights and liberties -- issue a categorical order to put an end
to the killings and assaults, to get the perpetrators, and declare the
decriminalization of libel an urgent measure.
We urge our colleagues to remain steadfast and band together and call on
the people whom we serve to help send a strong signal to those who would
deprive them of their right to know that, no, we will not surrender.
Posted by Bulatlat
References:
Jose Torres Jr., NUJP chairperson
Rowena Paraan, NUJP secretary-general
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