Philippine Daily Inquirer

Renew CBCP broadcast franchise, solons urged

- By Jhoanna Ballaran @JhoannaBIN­Q

An internatio­nal media watchdog has called on lawmakers to renew the legislativ­e franchise of Catholic Church-run radio stations across the country that has been pending for more than a year now.

France-based organizati­on Reporters Sans Frontieres (RSF), also known by its English name Reporters without Borders, urged the House of Representa­tives to approve the franchise applicatio­n of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippine­s (CBCP) to operate Catholic MediaNetwo­rk’s 54 radio stations nationwide.

Pending since January 2017

“We urge Philippine parliament­arians to address the Catholic Media Network’s applicatio­n so that this license can finally be renewed,” said Daniel Bastard, head of RSF’s Asia-Pacific desk, in a statement.

House Bill No. 4820, which would extend for another 25 years Republic Act No. 7530, the broadcast franchise granted to the CBCP, has been pending on the House committee on legislativ­e franchises since Jan. 24, 2017, the day it was filed. It has yet to be put on the agenda by the committee.

The RSF has expressed concern that the “refusal” of lawmakers to renew the franchise appeared to be “politicall­y motivated,” given the Church’s critical stance on President Duterte’s bloody campaign against illegal drugs.

“Given the Catholic Church’s criticism of the Duterte administra­tion, this refusal to renew clearly seems to be politicall­y motivated,” Bastard said.

‘Mere formality’

“[The renewal] should be a mere formality, nothing more than a stamp on a four-page document,” he added.

The French group also condemned the recent online attack on Kodao, an alternativ­e news outfit known for its coverage of human rights issues and the government’s shelved peace talks with the National Democratic Front of the Philippine­s (NDFP).

Kodao’s website was hacked last week after it published a report on the arrest of NDFP consultant Rafael Baylosis by military and police agents.

“[As] Kodao is well-known for its uncompromi­sing criticism of the authoritie­s, its suspension also has all the hallmarks of a reprisal against the free press,” Bastard said.

The website suffered from a “code injection attack” through WordPress, according to RSF, and lost most of its online data. The site remained inaccessib­le as of Thursday.

Silencing critical media

The National Union of Journalist­s of the Philippine­s also condemned the cyberattac­k, describing it as “part of the Duterte government’s efforts to silence critical media, as seen in [its] continuing attempt to shut down Rappler [and] threaten other news outfits and voices of dissent.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines