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PNA’S birth in 1973 came a year after death of PNS

- By Severino Samonte PNA

MANILA—MANY of the millennial Filipino journalist­s may be interested to know that the Philippine­s used to have its own news agency even before martial law was imposed in September 1972 by then-president Ferdinand E. Marcos.

Yes, that privately owned news outfit was the Philippine News Service (PNS), the predecesso­r of the present government-run Philippine News Agency (PNA), which marked its 48th anniversar­y on March 1.

PNS was organized in 1950 as a news-gathering cooperativ­e by the publishers of the then major and leading national newspapers—the Manila Times-mirror-taliba, Manila Chronicle, Manila bulletin, philippine­s herald, evening News, Bag on gB uh ay,andFoo ki en Times. Its main function then was to supply daily news and photos from the provinces to these newspapers as well as to those in the provinces.

Radio and television stations also used the PNS stories for a fixed monthly fee or subscripti­on. Foreign news agencies, such as the Associated Press, United Press Internatio­nal, Reuters, and Agence France-presse, and a few private entities were also allowed to subscribe.

Through the old mail system (using stamps and envelopes), it also maintained a news exchange agreement with foreign news agencies such as Antara of Indonesia, Bernama of Malaysia, Kyodo of Japan, Yonhap of South Korea, Central News Agency of Taiwan, and Tass News Agency of the former Soviet Union, among several others.

When Marcos declared a nationwide state of martial law under Proclamati­on 1081 on September 21, 1972, PNS was forced to cease its 24-hour daily operations since its major clients—newspapers, radio, and T V stations–were padlocked and guarded by government troops. At the time of its closure, PNS had some 120 news correspond­ents from all provinces and cities of the country.

About four months after the imposition of martial law and shortly after Marcos allowed a handful of newspapers and broadcast outfits to reopen, a group of former newspaper editors asked then Department of Public Informatio­n (DPI) Secretary and later on Sen. Francisco S. Tatad to explore the possibilit­y of opening a government news agency by acquiring the World War Ii-vintage teletype machines and other equipment of the PNS.

The persistenc­e of such a group of editors to once again set up an even more dynamic wire news agency bore fruit when PNS was allowed to reopen but under a new name— Philippine News Agency (PNA) as the government’s official news outfit.

Negotiatio­ns for the acquisitio­n of the PNS equipment were done by a group of former newspaperm­en from Tatad’s office at Malacañang, including the late Bureau of National and Foreign Informatio­n (BNFI) Director Lorenzo J. Cruz and the late Press Undersecre­tary Amante Bigornia.

The amount paid by the government for the old PNS teletype machines, typewriter­s, mimeograph­ing machines, and a photo darkroom plus few cameras was used to pay the delayedsal­aries of thepnsstaf fin manila from September to December 1972.

Jose L. Pavia, the late former executive editor of the defunct Philippine­s Herald, was appointed as the first general manager of the infant news agency. He headed its initial 11-member staff, with the late Renato B. Tiangco, also formerly of the Herald and a foreign news agency wireman as managing editor; and Severino C. Samonte, a holdover from the PNS, as national and provincial news editor at the same time.

As the government news agency, PNA was created under a Special Department Order issued by Tatad. It was placed under the BNFI, its first mother bureau that provided its fund.

Launched on March 1, 1973 as the national government’s official news agency, PNA initially used the editorial offices vacated by the PNS on the second floor of the National Press Club (NPC) of the Philippine­s Bldg. along Magallanes Drive in Intramuros, Manila.

The first set of PNA’S correspond­ents were picked from the former PNS stringers covering the country’s then just 70 provinces and 60 cities. A number of former staff members of the defunct Manila newspapers later joined the PNA Central Desk as editors, reporters and photograph­ers.

At the outset, four PNA correspond­ents were assigned each to cover the then existing four Philippine Constabula­ry (PC) Zones in Luzon, the Visayas and Mindanao. These were the 1st PC Zone in Camp Olivas, Pampanga; 2nd PC Zone in Camp Vicente Lim, Laguna; 3rd PC Zone in Cebu; and 4th PC Zone in Davao.

When Secretary Tatad turned on the switch to launch the PNA in the afternoon of March 1, 1973 in Malacañang, he said: “The Philippine­s News Agency will be operated in the best tradition of the world’s profession­al news agencies.”

During the martial law years, the PNA, together with the so-called Big Four news agencies—reuters, afp, ap and Upi—covered the entire archipelag­o, bringing news around the Philippine­s to the outside world as much as possible. for aw hi le,p na even entered into a news exchange agreement with some of these foreign news agencies.

A year after its birth, PNA inaugurate­d its first domestic bureau in Cebu City, opening a new era for the media in the country’s second-largest, most cosmopolit­an city. Seven tabloid-sized newspapers there began to carry current national and foreign news through the PNA wires, a radical departure from their former purely local coverage. This placed them in a position to compete for circulatio­n in the Visayas and Mindanao with the major national dailies published in Manila.

The year 1974 also saw the opening of similar PNA bureaus in Iloilo, Baguio, Davao, San Fernando, Pampanga; Cagayan de Oro, Bacolod, and Dagupan. These were followed by Lucena City, Legazpi, Cotabato, Tacloban, Zamboanga, Dumaguete, Iligan, Laoag, Tuguegarao, San Fernando, La Union; even Jolo, Sulu; and Los Baños, Laguna.

The peak number of domestic bureaus stood at 23 in 1975, with the opening of additional bureaus in Cabanatuan City, General Santos City, and Tagbilaran City. However, this number of bureaus was reduced drasticall­y as a result of cost-cutting measures in later years.

After the February 22-25, 1986 Edsa People Power Revolution, with the opening of a number of new newspapers in Metro Manila, a number of Pna-trained reporters tried their hands at actual newspaperi­ng and in the broadcast field. Many of them became editors and columnists in several national newspapers after they had once cut their journalist­ic teeth at the PNA newsroom.

Until early 1986, the PNA, through the former Office of Media Affairs headed by then Informatio­n Minister Gregorio S. Cendana (RIP), had overseas bureaus in San Francisco, California; Sacramento, Los Angeles, New York, Washington, D.C., Chicago, Toronto (Canada), Sydney (Australia) and Jeddah. These were closed down after the Edsa Revolution.

During the government reorganiza­tion in 1987, the BNFI was abolished and replaced with two new bureaus—the present-day News and Informatio­n Bureau (NIB) and the Bureau of Communicat­ions Services.

At present, PNA remains a division of the News and Informatio­n Bureau headed by Director Gigie R. Arcillaagt­ay. The agency is an attached agency of the Presidenti­al Communicat­ions and Operations Office under Secretary Martin Andanar.

In its 48 years of existence, PNA has transferre­d seven times—five times around the Intramuros area in Manila and twice in Quezon City, the latest in 1996 when it settled on its present headquarte­rs at the second floor of the Philippine Informatio­n Agency (PIA) Bldg. along Visayas Avenue in Diliman, Quezon City.

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