Impunity against journalists
>> Monday, November 9, 2015
EDITORIAL
Despite the avowed concern of Malacanang to
stop killings, harassment of torture of journalists in the country by state
agents, officials or unscrupulous individuals, the number keeps rising.
In latest case, media
practitioners in Central Luzon decried Tuesday the alleged assault on a local
newsman in Tarlac by a police officer with a shady record and called on the
director of the Police Regional Office 3 to initiate both administrative and criminal
investigations.
Nelson Bolos, a local
newsman, who also writes for the Northern Philippine Times had filed a
complaint against PO1 Rogelio Almazan, assigned to the Gerona Municipal Police
Station (MPS), before the PRO3 director’s office for allegedly punching him in
the abdomen with a clenched right index finger.
In his complaint to
Chief Supt. Rudy Lacadin, Bolos said: “Almazan is an abusive and arrogant
policeman. He badmouthed me and hit my abdomen several times with his clenched
right index finger.”
Bolos said he drew the
ire of PO1 Almazan for assisting a local businessman in demanding the return of
two Cal.45 pistols which he had entrusted to the policeman in 2009. (See page 1
for more details.)
Meanwhile, the
National Union of Journalists in the Philippines Baguio - Benguet made a statement
on UN Day to end impunity against journalists with a call “to uphold press
freedom and to end the climate of fear in a country that boasts of democracy
after the Marcoses were ousted from power in 1986. Journalists and press
freedom advocates will remain steadfast in its commitment to work to be the
voice of the people in a system that still suppresses the truth by practicing
the culture of impunity without shame. Most of the journalists killed worked in
the provinces, making us believe that the perpetrators of the crime are those
who were in practice of corrupting the poor situation in the communities.
“Warlordism,
corruption, and poor economy are just among the issues that community
journalists confront everyday, and as they voice out the issues of the basic
masses, the perpetrators make it convenient to abuse their power by using their
own people and even government agents to carry out its attacks.
The NUJP said in the
case of Northern Dispatch correspondent Alma Sinumlag, an intelligence officer
of the Philippine Army declared her as dead to her family in Kalinga, after
maliciously identifying her a member of the New People’s Army. “This atrocious
act of a government soldier clearly manifested the State's intentions to quell
the civilian rights and safety of a journalist, and to do this with impunity is
a grave disrespect to basic human rights.”
“Aside from killings,
other practices committed by the perpetrators are subjecting journalists to
surveillance, bribery, harassment, physical and verbal assault, libel, and placing
them under ‘order of battle.’ But as we always say, we will remain committed to
uphold the freedoms of the press, speech, and expression. We will remain
vigilant.”
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