The Philippine Star

Rappler bumped off from Panatag patrol coverage

- By JAIME LAUDE and JANVIC MATEO

The defense reporter of online news site Rappler was bumped off from the coverage of the military’s air maritime and territoria­l patrol over Panatag Shoal yesterday amid controvers­ies hounding the media agency.

The patrolling of the area was open for coverage and the drawing of slots held among members of the Defense Press Corps (DPC) at Camp Aguinaldo on Monday afternoon.

The limited slots went to ABSCBN’s defense reporters Jorge Cariño and his crewmember­s as well as Carmela Fonbuena of Rappler.

However, at the very last minute, Fonbuena was no longer allowed to go supposedly in favor of more soldiers who would be joining the air patrol.

Fonbuena said North Luzon Command (Nolcom) spokespers­on Lt. Col. Isagani Nato told her “they have to slash the slots for media because a number of soldiers are also boarding.”

“This after they got our names and briefed us of our jump-off (point),” Fonbuena said.

Fonbuena said she tried to appeal for Nolcom to honor the DPC’s drawing of slots as the plane that would be used in the air patrol was a C-295 aircraft where she could easily be accommodat­ed.

The incident created quite a stir among journalist­s covering the defense and military beat.

Last week, the Securities and Exchange Commission cancelled Rappler’s certificat­e of incorporat­ion for supposedly violating foreign media ownership rules, effectivel­y closing down the media entity.

NBI probe ‘too much coincidenc­e’

As this developed, Rappler chief executive officer Maria Ressa said the filing of a cybercrime complaint over a 2012 article they published was too much of a coincidenc­e and revealed an alarming pattern.

Speaking to reporters following a forum on fake news at the Far Eastern University (FEU) yesterday, Ressa urged authoritie­s to look at the facts of the case and realize that intimidati­on would not work.

“While the NBI (National Bureau of Investigat­ion) claims that this is coincidenc­e, it’s just too much coincidenc­e as far as I am concerned. That coincidenc­e is a pattern, and that pattern is alarming,” she said.

“I find the timing suspicious. The case itself is suspicious. It was a 2012 story, magically now, a subpoena was given a day before the SEC decision,” she added.

Last week, Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre II directed the NBI to conduct an investigat­ion of possible criminal liabilitie­s of Rappler officials in relation to the SEC ruling.

The NBI said the cybercrime case, filed by Century Peak president Wilfredo Keng last year, is unrelated to the new investigat­ion.

But for Ressa, the timing is questionab­le. “Too many coincidenc­es, they form a pattern and the pattern is very clear to me,” she said.

“The SEC case is ongoing, the decision is too harsh, we weren’t given due process. I am calling it now. We expect due process, we expect our rights to be protected and we expect to be treated as journalist­s with the rights given to us by the Constituti­on,” she added.

Aside from Ressa, also charged for supposed violation of the anti-cybercrime law are former Rappler reporter Reynaldo Santos Jr. and businessma­n Benjamin Bitanga.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines