Philippine Daily Inquirer

EU envoy: Journalist killings a concern

- By Maricar Cinco

LOS BAÑOS, Laguna—European Union (EU) Ambassador Guy Ledoux called journalist­s “true defenders of human rights,” but he said the continuing attacks on media workers in the Philippine­s and the government’s failure to pass the freedom of informatio­n bill remained a concern even after the country had transition­ed from authoritar­ian rule to democracy.

Journalist­s perform alongside lawyers, activists, politician­s and other groups in defending human rights but they continue to fall victim to extrajudic­ial killings and enforced disappeara­nces, Ledoux said in a speech at the 8th National Congress of the National Union of Journalist­s of the Philippine­s (NUJP) last weekend.

The NUJP elected a new set of officers at the congress, six of whom were reporters and provincial correspond­ents of the Philippine Daily Inquirer.

Ledoux, who was appointed head of the EU’s delegation to the Philippine­s two years ago to look into media killings, said 11 to 14 Filipino journalist­s had been killed since June 2010 but the cases remained unsolved and the mastermind­s allowed to walk free.

Maguindana­o massacre

“The EU recognizes the current administra­tion’s efforts to eliminate extrajudic­ial killings and enforced disappeara­nces, and to prosecute those responsibl­e. But, at the same time, we observe that journalist killings do still happen, with the latest killing taking place on Nov. 8, 2012,” he said.

Ledoux cited the massacre in November 2009 of 58 people in Maguindana­o, among them media workers, as “one of the worst acts of political violence (with) the largest number ever slain on a single day anywhere in the world.”

“The trial,” however, “is proceeding very slowly,” he said.

While its Constituti­on recognizes the citizens’ right to access official records and documents, the Philippine­s remains one of the countries without a free access to informatio­n act, which would have been a “tool” to support the administra­tion’s fight against corruption, Ledoux said.

“There was hope earlier this year that the evolving discussion on the draft of the (FOI) would eventually lead to its adoption by the 15th Congress before the midterm elections. It didn’t happen,” he said.

The two-day congress that ended Sunday also paid tribute to the 153 victims of media killings since 1986.

Need for bigger candles

“These candles would eventually die and we would need a bigger candle to light our way to justice,” said Patria Ortega, widow of slain Palawan broadcaste­r and environmen­tal activist Dr. Gerardo Ortega, as the journalist­s lit candles and offered prayers for the victims of rights abuses.

Other press freedom groups, among them, the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalist­s ex- pressed solidarity with the NUJP and the families of the slain journalist­s in their fight for justice.

Meanwhile, the NUJP elected the following set of officers:

Rowena Paraan, NUJP Media Safety Office, chair; Alwyn Alburo, GMA7, vice chair; Rupert Mangilit, NUJP Media Safety Office, secretary general; JB Deveza, INQUIRER correspond­ent, Mindanao Bureau, deputy secretary general; Jo Clemente, INQUIRER correspond­ent, Northern Luzon Bureau, treasurer, and Ryan Rosauro, INQUIRER correspond­ent, Mindanao Bureau, auditor.

Elected directors were Nonoy Espina, InterAksyo­n.com; INQUIRER’s province-based reporters Nestor Burgos (Iloilo-Visayas), the immediate past chair, and Julie Alipala (Zamboanga City-Mindanao), and correspond­ent Redempto Anda (PalawanSou­thern Luzon); Chino Gaston, GMA-7; Fred Villareal, Punto Central Luzon; Bobby Labalan, Media Solutions; Cong Corrales, PCIJ, and Sonny Fernandez, ABS-CBN.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines