The Borneo Post

From wars to Duterte: Philippine journalist ‘holds the line’

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MANILA: Philippine journalist Maria Ressa, who was named this week as a Time magazine ‘Person of the Year’, has extensive experience in conflict zones, but is now fighting a war to fend off government moves to put her behind bars.

Hours after meeting bail Tuesday on fresh tax fraud charges that the 55-year- old insists are ‘manufactur­ed’, Ressa was named to the prestigiou­s award.

The accolade, also given to murdered Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi and imprisoned Reuters reporters Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo, highlighte­d those taking “great risks in pursuit of greater truth,” Time’s chief editor said.

Ressa’s news site, Rappler, has taken a critical stand on Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s deadly anti- drug crackdown and now says it is the target of attacks from authoritie­s.

“It is easier to navigate a conflict zone, a war zone than it is to navigate the legal weaponisat­ion of laws in our country. But we will hold the line,” the Princeton graduate said last week.

Ressa and the site have been hit with multiple counts of misleading the government on taxes, and if convicted on one count alone she faces up to a decade behind bars.

It caps a tumultuous year for Ressa, which began with the government moving to revoke Rappler’s licence in January.

At the same time she has received a series of global awards from press freedom advocates, including from the Committee to Protect Journalist­s.

Ressa has been battling what she calls disinforma­tion under Duterte, who won elections in mid2016 on a promise to rid society of drugs by killing tens of thousands of people.

Rappler has been among a small number of Philippine media outfits producing investigat­ive reports on the killings in Duterte’s anticrime crackdown and is critical of his leadership.

A journalist for more than 30 years, Ressa is no stranger to threats.

As CNN’s former bureau chief in Manila and Jakarta, Ressa specialise­d in terrorism where she tracked the links between global networks like Al-Qaeda and militants in Southeast Asia.

“I’ve been shot at. I almost got thrown out of a country. I’ve been imprisoned for a night,” she told AFP last week.

However Ressa, who holds both American and Filipino citizenshi­p, returned to the Philippine­s as news chief of the largest television network ABS- CBN for six years.

In 2012, she launched her own startup, Rappler, in the social media- obsessed Philippine­s.

However that website is now fighting for survival as Duterte’s government has accused it of violating a constituti­onal ban on foreign ownership in securing funding, as well as libel and tax evasion.

Reacting to the Time award, Duterte’s spokesman Salvador Panelo said yesterday that charges against government critics were legitimate and free expression remained ‘robust’.

Ressa, who denies all the charges, has vowed to fight back.

“We at Rappler decided that when we look back at this moment a decade from now, we will have done everything we could: we did not duck, we did not hide,” she said while accepting an award last month. — AFP

 ??  ?? This image obtained courtesy of Time magazine shows the covers for its ‘Person of the Year’. (From left) Khashoggi; the workforce of the Capital Gazette in the US city of Annapolis, including five staff members killed in a June shooting; Maria Ressa and Reuters reporters Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo.— Reuters photo
This image obtained courtesy of Time magazine shows the covers for its ‘Person of the Year’. (From left) Khashoggi; the workforce of the Capital Gazette in the US city of Annapolis, including five staff members killed in a June shooting; Maria Ressa and Reuters reporters Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo.— Reuters photo

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