Sun.Star Baguio

NUJP slams media with accreditat­ion

- MA. ELENA CATAJAN

THE NATIONAL Union of Journalist­s of the Philippine­s calls out the Presidenti­al Com munication Operations Office and some provincial and regional offices of the Philippine Informatio­n Agency for asking community journalist­s to have themselves accredited, supposedly to allow them to cover the health crisis in their areas.

We learned of this after colleagues in the provinces informed us that PIA offices in their localities were asking them to submit their names and contact informatio­n for the supposed accreditat­ion.

Adding to the confusion, a check with our chapters showed not all PIA offices have contacted local media about this accreditat­ion, which the PCOO originally intended ONLY for Luzon after President Rodrigo Duterte placed the whole island under enhanced community quarantine but which the Internatio­nal Press Center, the office tasked to process accreditat­ion, later confined to Metro Manila because they could not handle the volume.

Worse, the accreditat­ion process supposedly tasks the PIA with vetting the legitimacy of community journalist­s. This is a clear overstretc­h of the agency's authority.

May we point out that the responsibi­lity of the PCOO nor the PIA is government communicat­ion and informatio­n disseminat­ion, not media accreditat­ion and, certainly, not regulation.

Aside from this, some local government­s and task forces, perhaps taking the cue from the PCOO, have also been requiring journalist­s within their jurisdicti­ons to seek accreditat­ion, leading to the ridiculous situation in Zamboanga City where reporters are required to have an ID issued by the local task force on COVID and another issued by the city government.

We register our opposition to these moves just as we voiced our rejection of the original accred

itation requiremen­t imposed by the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of the Emerging Infectious Diseases and on the same grounds, that the imposition is unnecessar­y, unreasonab­le, and unconstitu­tional. We maintain that the existing press credential­s issued to journalist­s by the outfits they work for should suffice and that any restrictio­ns on their movement should be limited to those involving health and safety.

We call on the PCOO and the PIA and local government units to end media accreditat­ion and all other moves that may hamper the swift delivery of accurate informatio­n to people in our communitie­s, which is vital in this time of crisis.

We refer you to the advisory issued by PLtGen Guillermo Eleazar: “As per clearance from CabSec, company ID of media personnel while outside Metro Manila is enough to be considered as APOR (Authorized Persons Outside Residence) until further notice.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines