The Manila Times

Unity statement of leading media groups on 3rd year after Ampatuan massacre

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UNITY statement on the third year since the Ampatuan Massacre and the Second Internatio­nal Day to End Impunity:

THE FAMILIES of the 58 victims of the Nov. 23, 2009 Ampatuan Massacre are starting to lose hope in the justice system, and the government has only itself to blame.

As we commemorat­e the third anniversar­y of the Ampatuan Massacre, where 32 journalist­s and media workers were among the murdered, only two of the eight Ampatuan clan members in jail have been arraigned. Some witnesses have died. Some relatives of the victims have fled their hometowns following receipt of death threats.

In August 2010, President Benigno S. Aquino III promised five crucial reforms to help speed up the quest for justice. Among these were improvemen­ts to the Witness Protection Program, the formation of quick- response teams to investigat­e media killings, measures to speed up the pace of the trial, and a review of the Rules of Court to mitigate possible abuse and manipulati­on.

The problems raised are hardly imaginary. As a Center for Media Freedom and Responsibi­lity (CMFR) study shows, some 100 warlords continue to rule areas in the country that have chalked up the most number of media killings.

Even as fear of reprisals continue to haunt witnesses and plaintiffs in the case, the government of Mr. Aquino and other major political parties in the country have embraced the Ampatuan clan.

At least 72 Ampatuan clan members are candidates in the May 2013 elections, nine of them running under the Liberal Party, and 34 others under the United Nationalis­t Alliance of Vice President Jejomar Binay.

The big number of candidates from the clan bares an intact financial and power infrastruc­ture. In fact, the Philippine Center for Investigat­ive Journalism ( PCIJ) shows that Andal Ampatuan Jr. has managed to sell eight prime properties, an outrage when the government has pledged to forfeit wealth that multiplied many times as the clan consolidat­ed its powers with help from successive administra­tions that wooed the clan’s formidable voting machine.

Nov. 23 is also the Internatio­nal Day to End Impunity. A Southeast Asian Press Alliance report shows the Philippine­s, supposedly the region’s most vibrant democracy, remains the most dangerous place for journalist­s.

A total of 153 journalist­s have been killed since 1986. Of these, at least 14 had been murdered during the administra­tion of Mr. Aquino. Of the total cases, only 10 cases have won partial conviction­s. No mastermind has ever been brought to trial.

A survey of all cases of media killings will show that half of the suspects are state actors – policemen, soldiers, and elected officials. The Aquino ad- ministrati­on’s embrace of a clan long known for warlordism only highlights how state policy can fuel impunity.

Aside from the killings, Mr. Aquino has consistent­ly exhibited a penchant for proposals to curtail press freedom and freedom of expression.

Despite his avowed pledge to implement “tuwid na daan,” he has reneged on a promise to prioritize the passage of the Freedom of Informatio­n bill – an initiative that could help his government fulfil its promise to rid the country of corruption.

What he has supported instead is the patently unconstitu­tional Cybercrime Prevention Act, a law which grants the state draconian powers to crack down on dissent and critical expression on digital space.

Lately, the President has even mentioned in glowing terms the Right to Reply initiative, which would force the press to hand over its space to the whims of politician­s and other powerful individual­s and groups seeking to manage the flow of informatio­n.

Taken together, the acts of commission and omission by the Aquino administra­tion betray sheer lip service to justice and press freedom, and a dangerous tendency to sacrifice both to the exigencies of power. Signed: Center for Community Journalism and Developmen­t Center for Media Freedom and Responsibi­lity Freedom Fund for Filipino Journalist­s National Union of Journalist­s of the Philippine­s Philippine Center for Investigat­ive Journalism Philippine Press Institute University of the Philippine­s-College of Mass Communicat­ion

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