Sun.Star Cebu

Photo-taking of journalist­s as threat from police: not for now?

- PACHICO A. SEARES publicands­tandards@sunstar.com.ph or paseares@gmail.com This column is also published by Sun.Star Online, www.suntar.com.ph. Access by clicking “Public and Standards Editor” under “The Company” at the foot of home page or click this:

It may be dismissed as innocent move until a media person looks at disturbing circumstan­ces: multiple killings, talks of ‘Red October’ and the warning to Dumpit wake visitors

Police regional chief Debold Sinas did it before. He ordered that photos be taken of active police officers who would visit the wake of SPO1 Adonis Dumpit in Cebu City. Dumpit was shot dead last June 27 in Bohol by fellow law enforcers during an NBI-police operation against him on suspicion of drug traffickin­g.

Last Thursday (Oct. 4), just a few hours after five bodies were found in the mountain barangay of Malubog, two police officers visited the SunStar Cebu office at P. del Rosario St., saying they would like to take photos of reporters and editors. They were ordered by their superiors in connection with its program to reach out to the community through the media.

Why the doubt

It looked like an innocent request. But it could be taken as a threat of sorts if the media community would:

Relate it to a similar order from General Sinas to take photos of Dumpit mourners. Mayor Tomas Osmeña, whom the slain cop served as close-in security, last July 4 decried the caution as “foul.”

Note that it coincides with the multiple killings in Malubog in which the police are accused by two survivors as possible suspects. Timing was uncanny, don’t you think?

Consider that the task is redundant since reporters are already identified through company-issued IDs. If really needed, photo and video shots can be taken of the reporters right at their beat, which they cover pretty much of their time. As to desk-bound journalist­s, their photos may be secured online or requested from their respective media units.

Explanatio­n

The visit was explained politely and so the initial fear was dismissed by one editor who even posed for a photo for the uniformed visitors. Broadcaste­rs though later picked it up; apparently, there were similar incidents reported by other media outlets.

It caused a minor uproar, given the style of General Sinas and the current atmosphere, which must be influenced by the talk about a “Red October” uprising that President Duterte disclosed and sent the AFP scrambling to justify the scare.

Not for now

Although media is prone to check a speculatio­n before squelching it, there’s no reason for a full-blown alarm, anyway “not for now,” as the general loves to put it. (E.g. Are journalist­s safe? “They are, for now.”)

A host of rumors preceded declaratio­n of martial law in September 1972, before military and police with their arrest and seizure orders (Assos) convinced people that it was for real.

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