The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Top Philippine paper in sale talks after Duterte threat

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MANILA: Top newspaper the Philippine Daily Inquirer said yesterday its owners are in talks to sell the publicatio­n, months after President Rodrigo Duterte threatened a shame campaign against them over critical coverage of his drug war.

Marixi Prieto, chairwoman of the Inquirer Group of Companies, said the family had decided to quit the newspaper business and was in talks to sell it to tycoon Ramon Ang, president of top Philippine conglomera­te San Miguel Corp.

“The Prieto family’s decision to divest after 25 years is a strategic business decision that it believes will maximise group opportunit­ies for the Inquirer group,” the paper said in a statement.

Ang said yesterday he has accepted the Prieto family’s offer to invest in the Inquirer Group but gave no details.

Neither side mentioned the paper’s longstandi­ng dispute with Duterte, who has said Ang helped fund his presidenti­al campaign.

In March Duterte described the Inquirer and major television broadcaste­r ABS-CBN as ‘sons of whores’andwarnedt­hemofkarmi­c repercussi­ons for criticisin­g him for alleged human rights abuses in the drug war.

“I’m not threatenin­g them but someday their karma will catch up with them,” Duterte said, singling out the Prietos as well as the Lopez family that controls the television network.

“They’re shameless, those sons of – journalist­s.”

He also threatened to use the government’s television station to shame the two families, and the subject has been a recurring theme in many of the president’s speeches.

Duterte had vowed during the election campaign last year to kill tens of thousands of drug dealers and users to stop the country from sliding to narco-state status.

Since he came to power a year ago police and unknown gunmen have killed thousands of suspects, but Duterte has rejected criticism from human rights groups that his crackdown may amount to a crime against humanity.

Prieto described Ang as a ‘longstandi­ng friend and business partner’ and said the talks, begun in 2014, restarted early this year.

“The family is confident that Mr Ang will uphold the Inquirer Group’s commitment to pursuing the highest standards of journalism.”

Ang said in a statement the paper would “continue to uphold the highest journalist­ic standards and make a difference in the society it serves”. — AFP

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