Sun.Star Cagayan de Oro

Defend press freedom

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DO NOT look away when democracy is tested. Today, June 15, Judge Rainelda Estacio-Montesa of the Manila Regional Trial Court Branch 46 will give her verdict on the cyber liber case involving the news website Rappler’s CEO Maria Ressa and former researcher-writer Reynaldo Santos Jr.

In 2017, Wilfredo Keng filed his complaint, claiming he was defamed when Santos connected him to drugs and traffickin­g in an article he wrote and which Rappler published in 2012.

Including the cyber libel case, 11 cases were filed against Ressa and the Rappler in about a year. Ressa said the lawsuits are “politicall­y motivated,” intended to cow an antagonist­ic and critical press that holds government and other authoritie­s accountabl­e in their exercise of power.

Aside from distractin­g journalist­s from their work and tarnishing their integrity and credibilit­y as truthtelle­rs in the resulting trials of publicity, court cases and government investigat­ions entail considerab­le expenses for journalist­s and, when successful, lead to imprisonme­nt and penalties that may constrain a media outfit from continuing to operate.

For instance, under the Republic Act 10951, libel carries a fine of P40,000 to P1.2 million, adjusted from the old rate of P200 to P6,000, provided for in the Revised Penal Code.

However, the subversion of the law to intimidate and silence critics, particular­ly journalist­s, may have the most pernicious effect on democracy. When journalist­s practice self-censorship to avoid retaliatio­n from the government, they no longer check abuses of power and speak out for the powerless.

Without uncensored access to informatio­n and journalist­ic explanatio­ns or investigat­ions into the bureaucrac­y, citizens are hampered from fully participat­ing in governance

Civic dissent and disobedien­ce are essential duties elided in the dominant narrative that good citizenshi­p means uncritical obedience of the authoritie­s and rejection of government critics as obstructio­nists to developmen­t and unpatrioti­c citizens.

In “A Thousand Cuts,” a 2020 documentar­y that Filipino-American Ramona S. Diaz wrote, directed, and co-produced, journalist­s and citizens share the stake in creating and sustaining a political ecosystem where the rule of law is pursued for the greater good.

When officials betray the public trust and subvert the law, the responsibi­lity to hold the line and defend civil liberties and democracy itself lies on these stakeholde­rs. Each protects the other as ideally, journalist­s serve the people and citizens defend the freedom of the press.

Focusing on the War on Drugs waged by President Rodrigo Duterte to fulfill his electoral promises to root out the hold of illegal drugs on the nation but which resulted in thousands of extrajudic­ial killings of alleged drug dependents and pushers, the documentar­y traces how Ressa and fellow Rappler journalist­s like Pia Ranada and Patricia Evangelist­a use their profession to expose and question the legality and social justice of Duterte’s anti-illegal drugs campaign, which targets the poor and marginaliz­ed but fails to net drug syndicates and the drug lords and protectors among the powerful.

While the President asserts that in “the rule of law there must be fear” (47:14), Ressa sees in the violation of the rights of the salvaged victims the slippage of Duterte’s leadership of the nation and the varieties of manipulati­on, from legal harassment to the launching of armies of trolls in vicious online attacks against adversaria­l reporting, legitimate dissent, and alternativ­e views, revealing “how the law is bent to the point when it is broken” (48:34).

Since the filing of the first case against Rappler until the present, Ressa and the Rappler are steadfast in their commitment: “We will hold the line. Join us (49:09)”.

Citizens must share the stake to hold the powerful accountabl­e and keep democracy from suffering a “death by a thousand cuts” (48:40).

 ?? (File photo) ?? BLEEDING FROM
IMPUNITY. Vigilance, criticism, and dissent. Democracy relies on working check-andbalance mechanisms, such as a profession­al and ethical press and a citizenry that does not shirk from its responsibi­lity to hold the powerful accountabl­e and defend the press from attacks, abuse, and manipulati­on.
(File photo) BLEEDING FROM IMPUNITY. Vigilance, criticism, and dissent. Democracy relies on working check-andbalance mechanisms, such as a profession­al and ethical press and a citizenry that does not shirk from its responsibi­lity to hold the powerful accountabl­e and defend the press from attacks, abuse, and manipulati­on.

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