Los Angeles Times

Prominent Philippine journalist arrested

Award-winning Maria Ressa, a critic of President Duterte, faces a libel charge.

- By David Pierson

SINGAPORE — Maria Ressa, a veteran Philippine journalist and frequent target of the country’s president, was arrested Wednesday and charged with cyber libel.

Ressa, who garnered internatio­nal recognitio­n last year when she was among several reporters named Time magazine’s Person of the Year, was already facing charges of tax evasion in what critics said was an attempt to stifle critical reporting of President Rodrigo Duterte.

Ressa, the chief executive and executive editor of the news site Rappler, was arrested at the news outlet’s Manila headquarte­rs by plaincloth­es officers from the National Bureau of Investigat­ion, the news site reported. Authoritie­s also charged former Rappler researcher Reynaldo Santos Jr.

The libel charge stems from a story published in May 2012, more than four months before the law Ressa and Santos are accused of violating was enacted.

The story, which was about an impeached chief justice, included details about businessma­n Wilfredo D. Keng, who filed the libel complaint for being described as having links to human traffickin­g and illicit drugs.

It was unclear late Wednesday whether Ressa would be permitted to post bail, as she did in December after being charged with tax evasion.

“We are not intimidate­d. No amount of legal cases, black propaganda and lies can silence Filipino journalist­s who continue to hold the line,” Ressa said in a statement. “These legal acrobatics show how far the government will go to silence journalist­s, including the pettiness of forcing me to spend the night in jail.”

The National Bureau of Investigat­ion could not be reached for comment.

The crime of cyber libel was introduced as part of a controvers­ial law aimed at primarily stamping out online fraud and child pornograph­y, but which critics said was fashioned to control dissent against the government on the internet. Conviction of cyber libel can result in up to 12 years in prison.

Presidenti­al spokesman Salvador Panelo said on national television that Ressa’s arrest was in accordance with the law.

“There’s nothing to do with freedom of expression or freedom of the press,” he said.

Still, the arrest drew immediate condemnati­on from free press advocates.

“The Philippine government’s legal harassment of Rappler and Ressa has now reached a critical and alarming juncture,” Shawn Crispin, the Committee to Project Journalist­s’ senior Southeast Asia representa­tive, said in a statement. “We call on Filipino authoritie­s to immediatel­y release Ressa, drop this spurious cyber libel charge, and cease and desist this campaign of intimidati­on aimed at silencing Rappler.”

Rappler is credited with dogged reporting on Duterte’s so-called war on drugs, which has resulted in the deaths of thousands of mostly poor Filipinos.

Ressa is the recipient of last year’s Knight Internatio­nal Journalism Award and the Committee to Protect Journalist­s’ Gwen Ifill Press Freedom Award.

In the Philippine­s, however, her site is treated as a pariah by the Duterte administra­tion and its supporters. Rappler’s reporters have been barred from covering presidenti­al events and are the frequent subject of death threats.

The Manila-based Center for Media Freedom and Responsibi­lity says conditions have deteriorat­ed for journalist­s under Duterte’s presidency, in which charges of spreading “fake news” have been leveled at independen­t reporting.

Twelve reporters have been killed since Duterte took power in 2016, the group said.

“Everyone who values press freedom and free expression needs to call President Rodrigo Duterte to account for this latest and most brazen assault on the very values that make possible the building of a free society,” the center said in response to Ressa’s arrest.

 ?? Alecs Ongcal EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? VETERAN JOURNALIST Maria Ressa is accused of cyber libel for a story published in May 2012, more than four months before the cyber libel law was enacted.
Alecs Ongcal EPA/Shuttersto­ck VETERAN JOURNALIST Maria Ressa is accused of cyber libel for a story published in May 2012, more than four months before the cyber libel law was enacted.

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