Kuwait Times

Philippine­s moves to shut down top broadcaste­r

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MANILA: The Philippine government yesterday urged the Supreme Court to cancel the franchises of the country’s top broadcaste­r, ABS-CBN Corp, a move slammed by opposition lawmakers and activists as an attack designed to intimidate independen­t media.

The government said the 66-year-old entertainm­ent and media conglomera­te, which drew the ire of President Rodrigo Duterte during his 2016 election campaign, had violated ownership laws and was involved in “highly abusive practices”. Duterte’s opponents said the complaint was timed to deny Congress the chance to renew the franchise of ABS-CBN, which employs nearly 7,000 people and engages hundreds of celebritie­s in radio, television and online content.

Solicitor-General and staunch Duterte loyalist Jose Calida said ABS-CBN had for too long shown greed and abuse of what was a privileged franchise. “We want to put an end to what we discovered to be highly abusive practices of ABS-CBN benefiting a greedy few at the expense of millions of its loyal subscriber­s”, Calida said in a statement. ABS-CBN denied that and said the complaint appeared to be

“an effort to shut down ABS-CBN to the serious prejudice of millions of Filipinos”.

Duterte has threatened for three years to torpedo the franchise renewal of ABS-CBN, which Duterte accuses of refusing to air his campaign commercial­s. ABS-CBN has not directly responded to Duterte’s claims, but its chairman, Eugenio Lopez said at the company stockholde­rs’ meeting in 2017 that it was “part and parcel of our work being a media institutio­n”. Lopez also said the company deals with these problems privately.

The move comes at a time of concerns among some investors about regulatory unpredicta­bility following a Duterte-ordered review of government contracts, which included big losses for two water firms whose billionair­e owners Duterte has criticized. ABS-CBN has lost 65% of its share value since Duterte assumed office in June 2016. It fell as much as 2.9% on Monday. In 2018, the government revoked the license of Rappler, a news website known for its tough scrutiny of Duterte, who called it a “fake news outlet” sponsored by American spies. Rappler still operates pending appeal.

Calida said ABS-CBN started a pay-per-view channel without approval and charges fees not supposed to be levied. He said that like Rappler, ABSCBN had breached foreign ownership restrictio­ns behind an “elaboratel­y crafted corporate veil”. The National Union of Journalist­s in the Philippine­s said the Supreme Court and Congress had the chance to prove they were independen­t and not beholden to Duterte. — Reuters

 ??  ?? MANILA: Staff and supporters raise their clinched fists during a protest in support of broadcaste­r ABS-CBN in Manila yesterday. — AFP
MANILA: Staff and supporters raise their clinched fists during a protest in support of broadcaste­r ABS-CBN in Manila yesterday. — AFP

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