Business World

Black Friday: Only the beginning

We have fallen into the hands of the most vicious and most violent wing of the dynasties that rule this rumored democracy.

- LUIS V. TEODORO

Any regime that calls itself democratic would have erred on the side of press freedom and free expression if there were any doubts about a media organizati­on’s non-compliance with the law, or would have allowed it to make the necessary correction­s.

Not only are there grave doubts about the Duterte regime’s claims about Rappler news site’s being foreign-owned; it wasn’t allowed to correct whatever errors it may have committed either. Instead, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) rushed to stop its operations.

But the regime doesn’t even claim to be in the democratic category, although one of Mr. Duterte’s closest allies, Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez, did justify as “democratic” his denying opposition congressme­n funds for their district’s infrastruc­ture projects. Because they didn’t agree with him, he even announced that he has the right to deny their constituen­ts the benefits the funding and realizatio­n of those projects would bring them. The same Alvarez has also threatened to withhold funds from the officials of local government­s who’re not supportive of the regime call for a shift to a federal form of government. He says it was a joke. His past acts and statements show it wasn’t.

Every political science freshman knows that Alvarez’s dis- pensing public funds only to his fellow true believers reeks with the political patronage so characteri­stic of the scoundrels who infest Philippine officialdo­m. It also assumes that public funds are his own and not the people’s from whose taxes they’re derived.

Alvarez and company’s autocratic mind-set and claims to entitlemen­t are only among the most recent indication­s of the perils to which the Philippine­s and its people have been made vulnerable by the current regime. The country is in fact in the gravest danger since the eve of the declaratio­n of martial law in 1972 because Philippine governance has fallen into the hands of the most reactionar­y, most vicious, most power- hungry and most violent wing of the dynasties that rule this rumored democracy.

The predatory clique that looks at killing as a necessary part of public policy is focused on remaining in power and restoring a dictatorsh­ip through Constituti­onal amendments that will make a mockery of the Bill of Rights through, among other putrid means, the insertion of the phrase “the responsibl­e exercise” of free expression, free speech and press freedom in Article III, Section 4 of the 1987 Constituti­on. It is also plotting the extension of the terms of congressme­n, senators, and the president, and the suspension of elections during a protracted, 10-year transition from the unitary form of government to a federal one.

In preparatio­n for the achievemen­t of this assault on what little remains of Philippine democracy, these marauders are ravaging the system of government checks and balances by rushing the impeachmen­t of the chief justice and the ombudsman. But they have also have been demonizing, threatenin­g, and intimidati­ng the

independen­t press and media and those courageous journalist­s who dare report the truth.

As the entire country saw during the Marcos terror regime, the next step in that sordid enterprise is press suppressio­n. Those who foresaw that probabilit­y have been proven right by the SEC cancellati­on of Rappler news site’s certificat­e of registrati­on, following the order of Solicitor General Jose Calida to that body to investigat­e the media organizati­on. The SEC decision should alarm

not only the media community but also every other organizati­on and individual engaged in the democratic imperative of monitoring government and holding it to account. The attack on Rappler is only the beginning of the regime assault on press freedom and free expression. Because critical media and their commitment to truth-telling and monitoring government are the arch-enemies of any tyranny, under the same pretext used against Rappler that it is foreign-owned because of the Philippine Depository Receipts (PDR) it has issued to foreign investors, other media organizati­ons that have similarly issued PDRs

are likely to be gagged as well.

But the suppressio­n of other media organizati­ons and practition­ers the present regime wants to silence is certain to follow through some other pretext. Such news organizati­ons as independen­t radio and television networks, critical broadsheet­s, and online news sites and blogs, the community press, student newspapers, and the alternativ­e media, with their honored tradition of combating dictatorsh­ip, are among those the regime will inevitably try to silence. President Rodrigo Duterte’s

allegation that he had nothing to do with the suppressio­n of Rappler and its being the first step in the curtailmen­t of press freedom

and free expression is true only in a limited, literal sense. He may not have directly ordered Calida

and the SEC to do it, but they certainly took their cue from him.

During his June 2017 State of the Nation Address ( SONA), in

one of his usual tirades Mr. Duterte threatened to have Rappler investigat­ed for its allegedly being foreign-owned. In the wake of

the SEC ruling, he has even justifi ed the attack on Rappler for supposedly lying and spreading the “fake news” of which his overpaid and under- qualified ( mis) communicat­ion hirelings are the true experts. He also said on another

occasion that he would cause the non-renewal of the franchise of TV network ABS-CBN.

Together with his proven hostility to the press, and very early

on, in 2016, his justifying the killing of journalist­s on the flawed argument that they’re all corrupt,

these suggest that Mr. Duterte is

punishing Rappler for dischargin­g the fundamenta­l journalist­ic responsibi­lities of truth- telling and holding the powerful to account. His regime will also do the same to other media organizati­ons and practition­ers he and his bully cohorts deem equally guilty of exercising their Constituti­onally guaranteed right to press freedom and free expression. Providing the context of events

is among the truth-telling responsibi­lities of the press. Not only is the suppressio­n of Rappler occurring in a situation in which the regime has been waging a nearly two-year campaign against independen­t media through the tidal wave of harassment­s, threats, and false informatio­n mostly sourced from the government media system and its online trolls and hired hacks in the corporate media. It is also happening during the regime’s orchestrat­ion of its by now obvious march to dictatorsh­ip via

the railroadin­g of Constituti­onal amendments. The conditions under which Rappler was targeted shows it to be an assault on press freedom. As the novelist Margaret Atwood declares in her The

Handmaid’s Tale, context is all. In these circumstan­ces, only a broad alliance of media, sectoralm and people’s organizati­ons, human rights defenders, journalist­s and everyone else who understand­s the imperative­s of free expression and press freedom in the democratiz­ation and reform of Philippine society and the

making of competent and honest governance can frustrate the fascist conspiracy for the return of authoritar­ian rule.

During the martial law period, tens of thousands of Filipinos —

students, profession­als, academics, artists, and journalist­s — together with organized farmers, workers and other progressiv­es, met the challenge to resist and eventually dismantle the Marcos

terror regime. They are once more being called upon to defend themselves and the rest of the people in this hour of extreme peril to everyone’s rights and lives.

If history is any guide, the unity media organizati­ons demonstrat­ed during the Black Friday (January 19th) rally for the defense of press freedom and against dictatorsh­ip will be, like the suppressio­n of Rappler, only the beginning. Resistance in various forms and means is the tried and tested and only effective response to tyranny and repression. �

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 ?? LUIS V. TEODORO is on Facebook and Twitter (@luisteodor­o). The views expressed in Vantage Point are his own and do not represent the views of the Center for Media Freedom and Responsibi­lity. www.luisteodor­o.com ??
LUIS V. TEODORO is on Facebook and Twitter (@luisteodor­o). The views expressed in Vantage Point are his own and do not represent the views of the Center for Media Freedom and Responsibi­lity. www.luisteodor­o.com

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