Justice nowhere in sight, a year and a half after the Ampatuan massacre

Today, it is exactly a year and a half since our nation was jolted by the worst incident of electoral violence in recent history and the single deadliest attack on the press ever.

You would think that in the face of such an outrage, justice would be swift in coming. But a year and a half since November 23, 2009, the wheels of justice, which have always ground slow, appear to have stalled to an almost dead stop and, worse, remain in danger of being reversed.

We have seen how otherwise brilliant minds can twist and bend the law to subvert the search for justice: the multiple motions that slow the judicial process; the perverted arguments – that the victims may have killed themselves or each others, that they died of natural causes, that the hideous injuries were insect bites – that have added insult to the already crushing anguish of the victims’ kith and kin.

We have seen how the dark forces responsible for the carnage have been allowed to remain intact – both in wealth and firepower – and continue to attempt to buy off victims’ relatives, and witnesses and their families, or, failing that, threaten or even harm them.

We have seen how the person who made the Ampatuan Massacre inevitable through her penchant for drawing bloodthirsty warlords to her side by allowing them to build personal empires and armies continues to evade an accounting for this and her many other sins against the nation and the people.

We have seen how, notwithstanding its promises, this administration has failed, indeed refused, to dismantle these private armies, most of them accorded official sanction as state militia, thus allowing extrajudicial murders and the possibility of another carnage like Ampatuan to continue.

Indeed, it is a testament to the extreme thirst for justice that the survivors of those who lost their lives have not wavered in the face of bribes and threats. To them go our deepest respects.

We are encouraged, as well, by findings of the Social Weather Station that, despite the seemingly waning attention of those sworn to see justice done, our people have not forgotten. The SWS survey of May 4 to 7 showed 51 percent of people are dissatisfied with how the government is handling the case, up from 46 percent in November last year, and an overwhelming 75 percent saying the case is proceeding “too slow.”

But while our determination to see this case through has not waned, we now face another threat, one that may well hamper our efforts to keep close watch on the proceedings and gag us from continuing to demand the justice that is due not just the victims but we, the nation and the people, as well.

For commenting on the efforts of one of the accused to wiggle his way out of the charges, Monette Salaysay, widow of one of the 32 murdered media workers, and NUJP Secretary General Rowena Paraan, who is one of those who has worked most closely with the victims’ families, are in danger of being cited in indirect contempt.

Should this happen, we fear that our search for justice might be dealt a fatal blow as a cloak of darkness and silence is thrown over the proceedings.

It is therefore fortuitous that, on this day, we bring our case to the hallowed halls of Congress, where the laws that are the bedrock of our national life are crafted.

We demand that our lawmakers join us and do everything within their means to ensure that the ends of justice are not perverted, that those responsible for this blot on our nation’s life – and that includes those within your ranks – be held to account and that such an outrage shall never happen again.


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NATIONAL UNION OF JOURNALISTS OF THE PHILIPPINES
4/L FSS Bldg. # 89 Sct. Castor corner
Sct. Tuason Street (near T. Morato Ave),
Bgry. Laging Handa,
Quezon City, Philippines
Tel.: (+632) 3767330
Email: nujphil@gmail.com
Web: www.nujp.org (under construction)
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Are you a journalist under threat?
Report it to NUJP’s Threat Hotlines:
*(+632) 3767330
* Email: nujphil@gmail.com
* Twitter:http://twitter.com/nujp
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“There can be no press freedom if journalists
exist in conditions of corruption, poverty or fear”
– IFJ
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– 

Joint NUJP and CCJD statement on Dr. Gerry Ortega’s killing

Joint Statement of the National Union of Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP)

and Center for Community Journalism and Development (CCJD)

Today, we commit Dr. Gerry Ortega to the earth he loved and for which he offered his life.

As we do so, we vow that the ideals of freedom of expression and ideas, a free press, and the truth, which he embodied in life, do not die with him but will flourish in the service of the people’s right to know.

Neither shall we rest until we find justice for Doc Gerry’s death and for the 141 other colleagues murdered before him since 1986. We demand that government order all investigating agencies to get their acts together and conduct a unified, coordinated and transparent investigation, leaving no stone unturned until all those responsible, especially the masterminds, are caught and punished.

We demand that government secure Doc Gerry’s family and all witnesses, and provide them with all the assistance they deserve.

Lastly, we demand, in light of persistent reports of a possible escalation of violence against our colleagues in Palawan, that government guarantee their safety and nip in the bud any and all threats. If any more blood is spilled, we will hold government accountable.

January 29, 2011

Reference:

Rowena Paraan, NUJP secretary-general

Red Batario, CCJD executive director


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NATIONAL UNION OF JOURNALISTS OF THE PHILIPPINES
4/L FSS Bldg. # 89 Sct. Castor corner
Sct. Tuason Street (near T. Morato Ave),
Bgry. Laging Handa,
Quezon City, Philippines
Tel.: (+632) 3767330
Email: nujphil@gmail.com
Web: www.nujp.org (under construction)
*********************************************************************************************************************************
Are you a journalist under threat?
Report it to NUJP’s Threat Hotlines:
*(+632) 3767330
* Email: nujphil@gmail.com
* Twitter:http://twitter.com/nujp
*********************************************************************************************************************************
“There can be no press freedom if journalists
exist in conditions of corruption, poverty or fear”
– IFJ
*********************************************************************************************************************************

 

Iloilo publisher-editor wounded in attack

NATIONAL UNION OF JOURNALISTS OF THE PHILIPPINES

Alert
January 28, 2011

Lemuel Fernandez, publisher-editor of the Iloilo-based Western Visayas
Daily Guardian, suffered a head injury after an unknown assailant hit him on
the head with a hard object around 9:30 p.m. Wednesday.

Francis Allan Angelo, the newspaper’s managing editor, said he and
Fernandez had just finished editing Thursday’s issue of the newspaper and
were about to board their vehicles when the assailant struck Fernandez in
front of their office in Molo District in Iloilo City.

Angelo said he rushed to Fernandez after he heard him cry out for help and
saw him holding the back of his neck, already bloodied. He then brought his
superior to the Iloilo St. Paul’s Hospital for treatment.

Fernandez told Angelo that his assailant who immediately fled was in short
pants and wearing a white shirt.

Aside from being the publisher-editor, Fernandez also hosts the newspaper’s
weekly radio program “The Guardia On Air.”

NATIONAL UNION OF JOURNALISTS OF THE PHILIPPINES – ILOILO (NUJP Iloilo)

January 27, 2010
STATEMENT ON THE ATTACK AGAINST PUBLISHER-EDITOR LEMUEL FERNANDEZ
The NUJP -Iloilo Chapter strongly condemns the attack against Mr. Lemuel Fernandez, publisher-editor of the Western Visayas The Daily Guardian in Iloilo City on the evening of January 26.
The NUJP  likewise calls on concerned authorities, especially the Philippine National Police (PNP),  to conduct a thorough investigation of the incident even as it also encourages members of the tri-media to be always on guard and put  personal safety above all other priorities.
The failure on the part of concerned authorities to take appropriate action on the matter may cause a chilling effect to other media colleagues who are regarded as defenders of press freedom.
Let us not allow the perception that society today is getting harsh and lawlessness is creeping in our midst.
The organization also extends sympathy to Mr. Fernandez who sustained a deep cut at the back of his head after he was assaulted by a still an unidentified suspect.
Mr. Fernandez was about to board his vehicle parked in front of their office along M.H. Del Pilar Street in Molo district when the assailant struck him on the head.
Bert Ladera
Chairman
NUJP-Iloilo


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NATIONAL UNION OF JOURNALISTS OF THE PHILIPPINES
4/L FSS Bldg. # 89 Sct. Castor corner
Sct. Tuason Street (near T. Morato Ave),
Bgry. Laging Handa,
Quezon City, Philippines
Tel.: (+632) 3767330
Email: nujphil@gmail.com
Web: www.nujp.org (under construction)
*********************************************************************************************************************************
Are you a journalist under threat?
Report it to NUJP’s Threat Hotlines:
*(+632) 3767330
* Email: nujphil@gmail.com
* Twitter:http://twitter.com/nujp
*********************************************************************************************************************************
“There can be no press freedom if journalists
exist in conditions of corruption, poverty or fear”
– IFJ
*********************************************************************************************************************************

How to breed impunity

It has been a year since Iligan City Councilor Chonilo Ruiz barged into the announcer’s booth of radio station dxRJ and mauled Albert Loyola as he anchored the morning program “Radyo Patrol.”

It has been a year since this brazen display of abuse of power, which was broadcast live to the audience of dxRJ.

It has been a year since the supposed public servant, Ruiz, chose to reply with brute force to a valid issue of public interest raised against him.

It has been a year since Ruiz said he saw no reason to apologize forwhat he did.

A year since, and still Ruiz has not been called to account.

This is how to breed impunity, to let such abuses go unpunished.

This is why more than 140 journalists have been murdered since 1986 and yet only a handful of gunmen and none of the masterminds have been convicted.

This is why those who wish to silence the independent Philippine press are emboldened to continue harassing, threatening, attacking and killing journalists in this supposed democracy.

The Albert Loyola case is the perfect example of why we say government is and should be held accountable for all assaults on press freedom, and why more and more observers here and abroad are driven to consider the Philippines a weak, if not failed, democracy.

If a state cannot protect what it acknowledges is a vital pillar of democracy, it cannot be expected to protect its own people.

 

 

NATIONAL UNION OF JOURNALISTS OF THE PHILIPPINES (NUJP)

January 13, 2011
Statement

Reference:
Nestor Burgos Jr.
Rowena Paraan

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NATIONAL UNION OF JOURNALISTS OF THE PHILIPPINES
4/L FSS Bldg. # 89 Sct. Castor corner
Sct. Tuason Street (near T. Morato Ave),
Bgry. Laging Handa,
Quezon City, Philippines
Tel.: (+632) 3767330
Email: nujphil@gmail.com
Web: www.nujp.org (under construction)
*********************************************************************************************************************************
Are you a journalist under threat?
Report it to NUJP’s Threat Hotlines:
*(+632) 3767330
* Email: nujphil@gmail.com
* Twitter:http://twitter.com/nujp
*********************************************************************************************************************************
“There can be no press freedom if journalists
exist in conditions of corruption, poverty or fear”
– IFJ

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