The Manila Times

Rappler was Aquino’s black-propaganda machine vs Corona

- RIGOBERTO TIGLAO laude summacum Email: tiglao.manilatime­s@ gmail.com Facebook:RigobertoT­iglao Twitter:@bobitiglao

only a P200 million compensati­on for that portion of Hacienda Luisita to be put under agrarian reform, a measly amount compared to the P5 billion that the clan was asking for.

The majority of the court justices resisted Aquino’s pressure. The earlier 2011 decision in April 2012 a month before the Senate ousted Corona as chief justice.

The black propaganda against Corona by PDI and Rappler served as smokescree­n for Aquino’s real strategy to remove Corona: Bribing the senator-judges not only with pork-barrel funds but with P100 million each from a fund it hi-jacked from several agencies, called the Disburseme­nt Accelerati­on Program. (If Aquino could throw a billion pesos at the senators, what’s P100 million to fund a new propaganda machine in the new media targeting the millennial­s?)

Rappler’s launch rushed

Rappler’s launching on January 2, 2012 appears to have been rushed to create a propaganda tandem with PDI vs Corona during his trial, which started on January 12, 2012 and ended in May that year.

The opening salvo of Rappler and PDI’s propaganda vs Corona was an article on January 1, 2012, by Marites Vitug ,the website’s editor-at-large (who however seems to be no longer connected with the website).

Titled “UST breaks rules for CJ Corona,” the vicious piece alleged that the oldest university in Asia, the University of Santo Tomas, bent its rules to give Corona a doctor in philosophy degree, since the Chief Justice did not submit a dissertati­on. The black propaganda was: Corona was such a crook he even got UST to give him a fake Ph.D.

The PDI even bent its rules on publishing articles by journalist­s employed in other publicatio­ns, to make the piece its screaming banner headline on January 1, 2012. The timing of the article pointed to the fact that it was part of Aquino’s game plan: The House of Representa­tives railroaded the articles of impeachmen­t three weeks before, and the Senate trial was scheduled to start in January.

But Corona was universall­y respected by the legal profession and didn’t have the slightest taint of corruption. Aquino needed a barrage of

Tag team

fake articles to demonize him.

The UST totally belied Vitug’s piece*, and the PDI never again ran a piece on the false accusation. Rappler however posted it twice, on January 2 or after the PDI published it, and May 21, when the Senate was deliberati­ng on its decision, which was made on May 29. Rappler even published several articles trying—unsuccessf­ully—to rebut the UST’s explanatio­ns such as a January piece that had a sarcastic headline, “UST: Corona’s lecture enough for PhD”.

PDI and Rappler made up a tag team in spewing out articles that painted Corona as a crook. PDI targeted newspaper readers; Rappler the new emerging cyber-space media.

A sample of such ruthless and false Rappler articles are in the collage of headlines accompanyi­ng this column: “Corona triples wealth while in SC”; “Corona lied about academic honors”; “Ombudsman

It is one of the Rappler’s vicious, false articles on Corona that has gotten it in trouble now. This was the allegation that Corona was using a Chinese businessma­n’s luxury car, which the National Bureau of Investigat­ion was investigat­ing on the basis of the complaint of the car’s owner.

In her melodramat­ic appeal that Rappler was being shut down because of its anti-Duterte stance, Ressa claimed that the Rappler has been “holding the powerful to account for their actions.” That is a patent lie. It was the powerful Aquino’s political and media thugs that beat up the hapless Chief Justice to a pulp.

Rappler grew under the aegis of the powerful President Aquino. It never posted an analysis or opinion piece in the entire six years that Aquino was in power that was critical of him and his administra­tion, while straightne­ws stories that showed how bad a president he was were downplayed.

Sorry, that’s not too accurate. There was an excellent analysis piece its managing editor Glenda Gloria wrote about Aquino’s deep character 2016—well, technicall­y it was still during Aquino’s term as he stepped down two days later.

Rapper was so supportive of the past regime, that there were persis- stockholde­r, property tycoon Benjamin Bitanga who really bankrolled it, but the tycoon closest to President Aquino, Jaime Zobel de Ayala. The rumor, totally unproven so far, had been bolstered by the fact that its chairman since its start was Manuel Ayala.

However, this Ayala is not at all related to the oligarchic clan. Manuel Ayala rather is a director of Energy Developmen­t Corp. and Sky Cable – informatio­n which aren’t mentioned of another oligarchic group that has been the closest to the AquinoCoju­angco clan: the Lopez media and power conglomera­te.

*The UST immediatel­y issued a devastatin­g rebuttal to the malicious piece. Classes as well as course work but not a dissertati­on were the absolute requiremen­ts for a Ph.D.. The dissertati­on is waived in recognitio­n of a candidate’s profession­al accomplish­ments.

Such Ph.D.s had been given by the UST and other universiti­es here and abroad. Busy as he was as a Supreme Court justice since 2002, and not really needing a “Dr.” title, Corona academic excellence, the doctorate awarded him was given

status, or “with greatest honors.” Faced with such a thorough denial of its article, PDI did what it had never done before, which was to put UST’s rebuttal as a banner headline. I was told the late editor in chief Letty Magsanoc was so incensed over the boo-boo that she ordered the newspaper’s internet version to permanentl­y delete it, so one can’t access this article anymore at the newspaper’s site. Google “ust-cj-coronaearn­ed-ph-d” for UST’s statement debunking the Rappler and PDI fake news.

 ??  ?? Rappler chairman Manuel Ayala: Also director of Lopez firms Energy Developmen­t Corp. (EDC) and SkyCable. Inset: From the Rappler website, which doesn’t disclose his two other major directorsh­ips.
Rappler chairman Manuel Ayala: Also director of Lopez firms Energy Developmen­t Corp. (EDC) and SkyCable. Inset: From the Rappler website, which doesn’t disclose his two other major directorsh­ips.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines