Sun.Star Cagayan de Oro

Inclusivit­y?

- BY NINI B. CABAERO Beyond 30

press conference. Every press is allowed to ask questions whether the answer is good or bad or the question is good or bad. You all have full access to Malacañang. Any media in the Philippine­s. Lahat walang restrictio­ns diyan.”

He did, as promised. SunStar and other provincial newspapers in the country have representa­tives able to cover Malacañang or have journalist­s who are members of the Malacañang Press Corps. Community journalist­s have more chances now than in the past to join the President in official trips abroad.

Although there is access to the President, there is no assurance that the media – national or provincial – are getting the informatio­n needed.

Duterte’s relationsh­ip with mainstream media has been rough and hostile at times, with him raising allegation­s against Rappler, Philippine Daily Inquirer and ABS-CBN television, and mainstream journalist­s highlighti­ng inconsiste­ncies in his statements and his lack of transparen­cy. He has denied access to media for some of his important activities like visits to war-ravaged Marawi in Mindanao.

In reaction to having a critical media, Duterte hired bloggers to manage social media discussion­s. Mocha Uson was one of them, now assistant secretary of the Presidenti­al Communicat­ions Operations Office (PCOO). Uson was known to have propagated fake news to her five million followers to support Duterte’s war on illegal drugs, and she had called mainstream media as “presstitut­es” (a play of the words press and prostitute­s). Other known pro-Duterte bloggers later also became PCOO officials.

In addition to hiring bloggers, the PCOO announced last week there is an “interim policy” to accredit bloggers to cover presidenti­al events. Perhaps not content with bringing into the government Uson and others like her, the PCOO probably thought it needed to drown out anti-government voices on social media.

The PCOO policy entails the giving of accreditat­ion to social media practition­ers to allow them to join the Malacañang Press Corps in their coverage of President Duterte.

Those to be accredited should be a Filipino citizen, 18 years or above and has at least 5,000 followers on any social media platform. Such general requisites make it open for the PCOO to accredit only progovernm­ent bloggers.

This is not the same inclusivit­y that provincial journalist­s had asked for at the start of Duterte’s term.

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