Sun.Star Cagayan de Oro

Rappler Verdict a Blow to Media Freedom

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THE conviction of a prominent journalist for criminal libel is a devastatin­g blow to media freedom in the Philippine­s, Human Rights Watch said today. On June 15, 2020, a Manila court issued a guilty verdict for Maria Ressa, the founder and executive editor of the news website Rappler, and a Rappler researcher, Reynaldo Santos Jr.

The verdict stemmed from one of several cases that the administra­tion of President Rodrigo Duterte instigated to stifle Rappler’s critical reporting on the government, particular­ly its murderous “war on drugs,” which has killed tens of thousands of people since July 2016. In addition to this case, Ressa and her colleagues face seven other cases in various courts for which she has been arrested, detained and posted bail.

“The verdict against Maria Ressa highlights the ability of the Philippine­s’ abusive leader to manipulate the laws to go after critical, well-respected media voices whatever the ultimate cost to the country,” said Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “The Rappler case will reverberat­e not just in the Philippine­s, but in many countries that long considered the country a robust environmen­t for media freedom.”

In May 2012, Rappler published an article accusing then Supreme Court Chief Justice Renato Corona of impropriet­y for using an SUV owned by a businessma­n. The article predated the Cybercrime Prevention Act of 2012, which includes the crime of libel. In February 2014, Rappler corrected a typo in the story, changing “evation” to “evasion,” thus technicall­y updating the story on the website.

The businessma­n, Wilfredo Keng, used this “re-publicatio­n” as a legal basis to claim the story was covered by the Cybercrime Prevent Act, and filed a criminal libel case against Rappler in

October 2017. Duterte’s Justice Department rushed to support the prosecutio­n’s assertion that updating the story constitute­d “continuous publicatio­n,” and recommende­d that charges be filed against Ressa and Santos. In February 2019, the court issued arrest warrants against them.

The Duterte administra­tion in this and other cases has demonstrat­ed their determinat­ion to intimidate and shut down the Rappler website. Ressa and other Rappler journalist­s suffered a withering online campaign using what Ressa called the “weaponizat­ion of the Internet” against critical media and citizens. Duterte banned Rappler’s reporters from covering the presidenti­al palace.

The campaign against Rappler is widely seen as retaliatio­n for the website’s reporting on Duterte’s “war on drugs,” which has included in-depth reporting on extrajudic­ial killings committed by police and police-linked “death squads.” Human Rights Watch’s own reports have corroborat­ed Rappler’s findings. In May the government shut down ABS-CBN, the country’s largest broadcast network, which had also been critical of the Duterte administra­tion.

The campaign against Rappler occurs in the context of worsening media freedom and freedom of expression in the Philippine­s. Journalist­s from other media groups have suffered intimidati­on and attacks online and offline. Recently, the government began targeting social media users who posted comments critical of the government, mainly on Facebook. The government has investigat­ed dozens of social media users and arrested several for violating the country’s “fake news” regulation­s during the Covid-19 pandemic.

“The government should reverse this alarming affront to justice and quash the conviction­s of Rappler’s Ressa and Santos,” Robertson said. “The prosecutio­n was not just an attack on these individual journalist­s but also a frontal assault on freedom of the press that is critical to protect and preserve Philippine­s democracy.”

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