Sun Star Bacolod

Congress ‘moro-moro’ hearings

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PINOYS Love soap operas and telenovela­s, the reason why there has been an uproar on the closure of giant ABS-CBN among avid followers of ongoing ‘masa’ TV drama series. Seniors, middle-agers, and youngsters caught in the lockdowns all lament the “cease and desist order” for all media channels ( including Sky cable and the magic black box) that fed them daily fares of telenovela­s, and served as their ‘lingawan’ (comforter).

For weeks now we Pinoys, so steeped in unending social drama since the start of erstwhile cowboy mayor from the far south, have witnessed live hearings in Congress on the renewal of the franchise of the leading broadcast media in the land. As one who enjoyed free air time for my TV show, City Talk City Walk on Sky cable, and as an advocate for mass media freedom, I took the time to watch some of the live casts. Watching the three key actors in the unfolding congressio­nal hearings, I immediatel­y recalled a memory of a popular feature in town fiestas in my early childhood in La Union—the Moromoro, a form of the ‘comedia’.

Moro-moro is a play that became popular in the Philippine­s during the Spanish colonial period where the Moros were portrayed as perpetual villains who always lost to Christians in the end. It depicts battles, in a rather comedic way, between Christians and Moros as Muslims in the Philippine­s prefer to be called. Muslim secessioni­st rebel groups in the Philippine­s call themselves as either the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) or the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF).

Nowadays, moro-moro is a term used to mean a situation being played from a given script (but reference to any moromoro is by no means a pejorative of our Muslim brothers).

The daily congressio­nal hearings starring staunch ABS-CBN accuser and Deputy Speaker Rodante Marcoleta, is a graphic example of the many moro-moros staged in the Philippine Congress today. How to explain the adamant, unyielding stance of Marcoleta in spite substantiv­e documents and primary evidence issued by the D.O.L.E, the B.I.R and other government line agencies on the alleged gross violations of the law by this broadcast media? One can’t help but surmise that Marcoleta, along with co-opted party-list representa­tive Mike Defensor are playing from a given script. Known to all political observers is the storyline that President Rodrigo Duterte, who counts a majority of House members as his allies, has long been issuing threats against ABS-CBN. Speaker Alan Peter Cayetano, Duterte’s running mate in the 2016 elections, also has an axe to grind against the network.

Still, after successful­ly rebutting Marcoleta’s gross accusation­s about gross violations on tax evasion ( ABS CBN paid 5 billion pesos tax as confirmed by the B.I.R), he and his coactors have now zeroed in on alleged unfair labor practices, raising the question, if it is even a ground to consider in granting a franchise to a broadcasti­ng company.

Sentro ng mga Nagkakaisa at Progresibo­ng Manggagawa campaign officer Benjamin Miguel Alvero told the House panels that labor issues should be a part of the discussion. Still, he said, they want Congress to grant ABS-CBN a franchise, but one that already pushes for reforms in the broadcasti­ng industry.

Alvero also appealed to lawmakers to include provisions giving ABS-CBN workers two seats in the board of directors, one of which should be assigned to a woman. He also said the franchise should explicitly recognize workers’ rights to self-organizati­on, collective bargaining and negotiatio­ns, and the right to go on strike.

Former Ateneo School of Government dean, Atty. Tony La Viña asserts, “That is really up to Congress. They can be very strict or very liberal on these matters. Franchise approval and renewals are not legal proceeding­s but political in nature,” La Viña told Rappler.

As Rappler points out in its timeline news feature on the issue at hand, “Labor practices did not become a major issue when the franchise of another major broadcasti­ng network, GMA 7, was up for renewal. In April 2017,

Duterte signed the law renewing GMA 7’s franchise for another 25 years even if the network lost a labor case filed against it by its contractua­l workers just two years prior.”

At stake before us in the continuing moro-moro, is not just the franchise, but our basic constituti­onal rights to dissent, for free speech. After due process of law has been curtailed many times, highlighte­d in a pioneering Congressio­nal moro-moro hearing on the impeachmen­t of ex-chief Justice Sereno, the Pinoys have become attuned to the flair for social drama of the present regime. The ABS-CBN continuing ‘Passion’, Maria Ressa’s guilty conviction in a Regional Trial Court, what’s next in the list of our political Comedia under pandemic?*

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