Sun.Star Pampanga

Shout-out for community journalist­s

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THE nightmare repeats: Last June 30, suspect Jarrod Ramos shot and killed five people when he carried out what the police call a “coordinate­d attack” in the newsroom of the “Capital Gazette,” a community paper in Annapolis, Maryland.

While Ramos has not explained his motive to authoritie­s, it has been reported that he sued the newspaper in 2012 for defamation and invasion of privacy when it reported that Ramos had pleaded guilty to criminal harassment.

After a circuit judge dismissed the complaint in 2013 as not having establishe­d that the “Capital Gazette” column contained a falsehood and an appeals court upheld the decision in 2015, Ramos posted his rantings against the paper in a website he created.

The mass shooting targeting the Maryland journalist­s reveals the vulnerabil­ity of journalist­s to violence arising from those discontent­ed over their performanc­e of an essential service to the community: reporting and interpreti­ng of news that are crucial for the public.

The expression, “all in a day’s work,” associates journalism with more than the garden variety of workplace stress and risk. Coverage of “deadly situations,” such as “an air strike, an artillery bombardmen­t, or a suicide bombing,” turns journalist­s into “collateral victims,” according to the internatio­nal media watchdog, Reporters Without Borders (RFS), in a report Rappler published on Dec. 19, 2017.

In that same report, the Philippine­s emerged as the “deadliest country for journalist­s in Asia” in the RFS yearend report, which ranked the Philippine­s in a list of the top five countries where it is dangerous to practice as a journalist, along with Mexico, Iraq, Afghanista­n, and, “the world’s deadliest,” Syria.

The Maryland tragedies have a deeper significan­ce for Filipino media workers because authoritie­s consider the “Capital Gazette” media workers as victims of “targeted and crossfire killings,” which means that, unlike “collateral victims”of “deadly situations” or journalist­s felled while on the field, they were singled out by an attacker with a grievance against them.

“Targeted and crossfire killings” already claimed two Filipino journalist­s in 2018: Edmund Sestoso, a Dumaguete broadcaste­r, and Dennis Denora, a publisher and columnist in Davao del Norte.

As the media that is not just “on the ground” but voluntaril­y “embedded” with their public as residents and citizens, community journalist­s have a connectedn­ess with the locality that gives them an unparallel­ed perspectiv­e in covering concerns and issues that are ignored,

bypassed or even taken out of context by media based in the national capital.

Many community journalist­s expose corruption and human rights violations, which require sustained investigat­ion and commitment to persist despite threats to safety and financial sacrifices.

The “stakeholde­rship” practiced by many community journalist­s is balanced by civil society, serving as media watchdogs to demand accountabi­lity from journalist­s but who also defend the press from encroachme­nts on their freedom to report and interpret responsibl­y.

The public’s feedback on media’s performanc­e, especially vigilance and criticism of errors, lapses, omissions, and abuses, safeguard journalist­s as channels for democratic participat­ion and public good.

A media-literate audience does not only engage with the media but also educates itself on how the media works, especially how one can point out how the media has erred; explain a perspectiv­e clashing with the coverage or interpreta­tion by the press; or, when the channels for the audience’s right to reply have been exhausted, seek redress through the courts.

The importance of a local press to the vibrancy of the community cannot be underestim­ated, especially in the age of “fake news” and social media attacks against mainstream media’s credibilit­y. Shooting the messenger does not just attack the press but erodes democracy, founded on civility, rationalit­y, and the Law. — Sunnex

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