The Philippine Star

Palace execs to hold ‘press freedom caravan’ in Europe

- By ALEXIS ROMERO

Officials of the Presidenti­al Communicat­ions Operations Office will hold a “press freedom caravan” in European countries to discuss media-related issues, including the arrest of journalist Maria Ressa, to counter claims that the Duterte administra­tion is silencing its critics.

Communicat­ions Secretary Martin Andanar said some officials of his agency would meet with journalist­s in Belgium, Bosnia and Switzerlan­d to answer their questions about the state of press freedom in the Philippine­s.

“They are in Brussels – they will go to Bosnia first before Brussels – and then to Switzerlan­d. They will talk to the European media because they have lots of questons about press freedom in the Philippine­s,” Andanar told state-run Radyo Pilipinas in mixed Filipino and English on Saturday.

“We are bringing the press freedom caravan there so that they can be enlightene­d about the case of Maria Ressa,” he added.

Andanar said presidenti­al communicat­ions undersecre­taries Joel Egco and Lorraine Badoy and assistant secretary Kris Ablan would explain “the nature” of the case of Ressa and “why the Duterte administra­tion had nothing to do with it.”

“It is clear that it is a case between a private individual, a private businessma­n in the name of Wilfredo Keng, and Miss Ressa and Rappler,” the Cabinet official said.

“You are not above the law. So you are given all of the leeway and you are given all of the legal remedies that you can get... but to say that this is against press freedom, and to say that it is an affront to press freedom is a big mistake because it’s not true,” he added.

Ressa, chief executive officer of news website Rappler, was arrested on Thursday over a cyber libel complaint filed by Keng.

In 2012, Rappler published a report about the businessma­n’s alleged connection with the late former chief justice Renato Corona, who was ousted in the same year.

The report, written by then Rappler researcher Reynaldo Santos Jr., claimed that the late chief justice had been using a sport utility vehicle owned by Keng.

Rappler also claimed to have obtained an intelligen­ce report stating that Keng had been under surveillan­ce by the National Security Council for alleged involvemen­t in human traffickin­g and drug smuggling. The intelligen­ce report said the businessma­n was also involved in a murder case “for which he was never jailed,” according to the Rappler article.

Rappler and its supporters here and abroad have described Ressa’s arrest as an attack on press freedom and have accused Duterte of clamping down on his critics.

Rappler pointed out that Keng’s complaint came five years after the story was published and months before the cyber crime law was enacted. It noted that the National Bureau of Investigat­ion had closed an investigat­ion in February 2018 because the one-year prescripti­ve period had lapsed. The NBI revived the case eight days later, arguing that as long as the report can be accessed online, it can be covered by the cyber crime law even if it was published before its enactment.

Malacañang and Keng have denied that Ressa’s arrest was related to press freedom. Keng said his complaint is a “private criminal action” against Rappler over what he described as their “untrue, unfair and malicious imputation of grave crimes” against him.

Presidenti­al spokesman Salvador Panelo has also defended Ressa’s arrest, saying it was done because the government observes “the rule of law.” He has also maintained that the executive branch has no control over the judiciary, which issued the arrest warrant.

President Duterte has also denied involvemen­t in the arrest, saying he does not know Keng.

Unfazed

Meanwhile, Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra challenged Ressa to file suits against him and the government over her indictment and arrest.

Guevarra is unfazed by the threat of Ressa to hold the government accountabl­e for her ordeal, believing that such cases would hold no water and be junked for sure.

“We are performing our duties to prosecute anyone who breaks the law. We are confident that her allegation­s will not prosper because we have not violated any law. So just go ahead and bring it on,” he said yesterday when asked for a response to Ressa’s threat.

He vehemently denied the insinuatio­n of Ressa that the Department of Justice (DOJ) and the NBI have engaged in “selective justice” and “weaponizat­ion of the law” in indicting and arresting her upon the order of a Manila court.

“Harassment and persecutio­n are not in my vocabulary,” Guevarra stressed.

The filing of a cyber libel case against Ressa and her arrest, according to Guevarra, were not done to harass or target critics of the Duterte administra­tion or to threaten the constituti­onal freedom of the press, reiteratin­g that it is an ordinary criminal case now up to the trial court to resolve.

“Press freedom is not absolute. The rights of other citizens deserve equal protection,” the justice secretary pointed out.

He added that Ressa is “old enough to know what’s good for her” and should just face the case before the court without the “theatrics.”

Guevarra issued the statements in response to Ressa’s allegation against him and the DOJ and her threat to make the government accountabl­e for her ordeal.

“What the government has done is to actually forge us in fire. It made me, as the CEO and a journalist, to decide early on that we would live according to our standards and ethics, that we will hold government accountabl­e even if it’s bad for business,” Ressa said in an interview last Friday.

‘Anyone can be charged with libel’

In light of the recent arrest of Ressa, legal experts have warned that with the advent of technology, anyone, not only the media, can now be easily charged with libel.

“If the motion to quash by the camp of Maria Ressa is denied by the (regional trial court), then that is the signal for them to go to the Supreme Court, to question that denial. If the denial stands, then that is the signal that the case can already proceed to trial which means other cases can be initiated subject to another challenge,” Theodore Te, former spokesman for the Supreme Court, said in the Friday episode of “The Chiefs” on Cignal TV’s One News.

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