The Manila Times

‘Drug addicts, chief justice deserve due process’

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THE chairman of Asia’s top communicat­ions think- tank spoke out on Thursday against “assaults” to democracy, due process and the press, warning that legal shortcuts were a slippery slope to authoritar­ianism.

“Even drug addicts and a chief justice of the Supreme Court deserve due process,” said Crispin Maslog, a veteran newsman and educator, drawing a parallel between extrajudic­ial killings of drug suspects and moves to unseat Chief Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno outside of the impeachmen­t process.

Maslog delivered the 50th St. Thomas More Lecture at the Faculty of Art and Letters of the University of Santo Tomas (UST) in Manila, in honor of the English martyr and statesman and the anniversar­y of the country’s biggest liberal arts college.

More, Maslog recalled, was even willing to give the devil the everyone’s protection.

Maslog, chairman of the Asian Media and Informatio­n Center, also lamented government threats to cancel the licences or franchises of traditiona­l media like the Philippine-DailyInqui­rer and ABS-CBN, amid the proliferat­ion of internet trolls, fake news and “networked disinforma­tion.”

“To keep our democracy alive and robust, we need to keep our public sphere open. We should allow all stakeholde­rs in our way of life and in our government free access to our marketplac­e of thought,” he said.

“Cyber-bullying on social me-

dia by an army of trolls who blindly obey the command of not conducive to free democratic debate,” he added.

Philosophy professor Michael Anthony Vasco, UST Arts and Letters dean, said safeguardi­ng the truth was one of the biggest challenges of post-modern and pluralisti­c society, and pointed out that “truth can be very political.”

“The hegemonies of power and reception and understand­ing of truth. Political authority can in fact dictate what is truth,” he said, citing French philosophe­r Michel Foucault.

democratic society, is also determined by personal and ideologica­l interests. Even public opinion is no longer based on reasonable grounds or evidence, or even by common sense, but are shaped by advancing interests that are personal or ideologica­l, making spurious truth claims that intend to confuse the public and divert public opinion from the truth and instead propagate half truths just to change the tide of public opinion to their favor,” he said.

 ??  ?? Crispin Maslog
Crispin Maslog

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