The Philippine Star

SEC to study Rappler investor’s move to donate investment­s

- By IRIS GONZALES With Christina Mendez

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) will study the latest move of Omidyar Network to donate its investment­s in online news network Rappler to determine the impact on the corporate regulator’s earlier ruling on the media entity.

Omidyar on Wednesday announced that it has donated its Philippine Depositary Receipts (PDRs) to 14 Filipino managers of Rappler to address the unwarrante­d ruling made by the SEC.

Sought for comment, SEC chair Teresita Herbosa said the SEC needs to look into this.

“We will be studying this because the case is already with the Court of Appeals and the CA has the authority to pass upon this developmen­t,” Herbosa said.

She said that “supervenin­g events during appeal, whether it is a ground for withdrawal, dismissal, rendering moot and academic or continuanc­e of appeal, is for CA to pass upon. As party appellee, SEC will respond or give its position on such developmen­ts as may be ordered by the CA.”

SEC Commission­er Ephyro Amatong gave a similar comment.

Last January, the SEC ruled that Rappler violated the constituti­onal limits on foreign ownership in media after its PDRs issued to Omidyar gave the foreign company veto powers. It issued an order revoking Rappler’s certificat­e of incorporat­ion. Rappler has filed an appeal before the CA.

PDRs are instrument­s which give foreign investors a passive economic interest in a Philippine company, but the SEC argued that the Omidyar PDRs issued by Rappler gave the foreign investor veto powers.

Thus, the SEC said Rappler violated the Constituti­on because where mass media is concerned, no control whatsoever may be granted to foreign investors.

“100 percent Filipino control means zero foreign control. Control is any influence over corporate policy and not limited to ownership of stock,” the SEC said.

“Rappler has already filed an appeal with the CA. If this informatio­n is correct, I would expect them to raise it before the CA and the CA will decide appropriat­ely,” Amatong said.

Malacañang slammed Rappler anew for decrying the move of the SEC to revoke its license as infringeme­nt of press freedom when the online news site actually violated the Constituti­on.

Presidenti­al spokesman Harry Roque made the point when Rappler’s foreign investor, Omidyar Network, moved to donate $1.5 million in PDRs to its Filipino managers.

He said Omidyar’s donation to its Filipino managers does not remove the fact that Rappler breached the Constituti­on.

“This latest act is nothing but a circumvent­ion of the law, which restricts ownership of media entities in the country to 100 percent Filipino-owned,” Roque added.

The action of Omidyar Network and Rappler only showed that the SEC was right in its decision when it pointed out the online news site allowed a foreign entity to have a majority share of investment in the news site.

“That’s for the SEC to address. It’s an acknowledg­ement that they breached the Constituti­on and hence, they should not have cried infringeme­nt of freedom of the press,” Roque said.

The Palace official was asked to comment on the PDR donation. Rappler said the gesture proves that it has always been Filipino-owned and controlled.

The SEC decision prompted Rappler to cry foul over the government’s move, saying the Duterte administra­tion was curtailing freedom of the press.

The move came after President Duterte openly attacked Rappler, along with other news outfits deemed critical of the administra­tion.

Taking cue from the Office of the President, the Presidenti­al Security Group (PSG) banned the Rappler reporter assigned in Malacañang from covering the President and other Palace activities.

Roque earlier said the President was offended by Rappler’s reports, which the Palace also described as “fake news.”

The Rappler correspond­ent had lost Duterte’s trust, the presidenti­al spokesman said at the height of the controvers­y.

In a report posted on its website yesterday, Rappler said the donation was done via a conference call.

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