BEHIND
THE SCENES
Alfred
P. Dizon
Just days before
Christmas, assassins killed the first media practitioner under the Duterte
administration on Monday, the National Union of Journalists in the Philippines
said.
Larry Que, publisher
of Catanduanes News Now, was shot in the head by a lone gunman as he was
about to enter the building that houses his insurance office late Monday.
Que succumbed to a
gunshot wound in the head early Tuesday. The NUJP condemned the murder and
challenged the Presidential Task Force on Violations of the Right to Life,
Liberty and Security of the Members of the Media to immediately solve his
killing.
According to the
NUJP’s Catanduanes chapter, Que’s murder came after his column criticized what
he called negligence of local officials in allowing a shabu laboratory in the
island province.
Authorities claimed
the raided shabu lab was the biggest so far discovered in the country.
The NUJP’s Catanduanes
sector also reported Jinky Tabor, who acted as a witness to the raid on the
laboratory, has also received death threats.
“It should be stressed
that the murder of Que is not the first assault on journalists under the
current administration,” said Dabet Panelo, secretary general of NUJP.
On the day of
Duterte’s inauguration, motorcycle-riding gunmen shot and wounded Saturnino
Estanio of Radio Mindanao Network’s dxRS in Surigao City and his
12-year old son, Panelo said.
She added a bystander
was also wounded injured in the incident.
Last month, Pangasinan
journalist Virgilio Maganes survived an attempt on his life by gunmen who
apparently attempted to disguise the hit as drug-related.
They left behind a
cardboard placard that supposedly branded him as a drug pusher.
“Thus far, we have to
hear back from authorities despite the creation of task forces to investigate
these thankfully botched assassination attempts,” Panelo said.
“It has not helped
that Duterte, who has shown a total aversion to criticism, and some of his
officials have time and again been openly hostile towards journalists and the
media as a whole, with his loyal supporters taking up the cue and heaping
insults, curses and even threats through social media on several of our
colleagues,” the NUJP said.
The NUJP is calling on
the administration “to walk the talk” and prove its professed respect for
press freedom “by ending its penchant of falsely blaming media for deliberately
misinterpreting its often inconsistent and incoherent messages and instead
working on making its communications crystal-clear.”
Que’s murder came
after the Paris-based press freedom watchdog Reporters Without Borders in its
annual round-up showed high concern over the continued killings of journalists
around the world.
***
The Department of
Health has placed all government hospitals under Code White alert until
Jan. 5, 2017 for firecracker victims this Christmas Season and New Year revelry.
Code White alert means
these hospitals make sure they have enough manpower, medicine and medical
supplies on standby.
“In Code White, no one
is allowed to take a leave. It is more of preparedness. The hospital is
ready 24/7,” said DOH Secretary Paulyn Ubial said. The health chief assured the
public all DOH hospitals are prepared to attend to firecracker victims during
this Yuletide
celebration.
Ubial reiterated the
DOH’s call for the public to avoid using firecrackers to prevent loss of limbs
and life. She cited need for parents to watch over their children, who
accounted for 42 percent of injuries related to firecrackers during the 2016
revelry.
The health chief has
asked all local government units to organize community fireworks displays to
encourage the public to stop use of firecrackers.
The DOH started its
surveillance for injuries related to firecracker blasts, stray bullets
and watusi poisoning last Wednesday.
***
Following public
criticism, ranking officers of the Philippine National Police will not receive
hefty cash gifts from President Duterte after all.
A day after PNP chief
Director General Ronald dela Rosa announced Duterte had allocated P50,000 to
P400,000 in cash incentives each for star rank officers and police provincial
directors, he said Malacañang will no longer give the cash bonuses.
During Monday’s
Christmas party for police officers and their families in Camp Crame live on
television, Dela Rosa told officials entitled to cash gifts to proceed to his
office to claim their financial incentives.
However, not a single
official, including those who waited until evening, received money. When he was
asked where the money was sourced, Dela Rosa replied it might have come from
the intelligence fund of the President.
Dela Rosa blamed
himself, saying Malacañang apparently became “discouraged” to release their
cash incentives because of his announcement.
“When we held a press
conference, a lot of people asked where it was sourced. Malacañang was
discouraged,” Dela Rosa told reporters. “They told us, maybe before New Year,
we will be given one sack of rice each,” he added.
Dela Rosa admitted
some of his fellow generals became frustrated after learning they will no
longer receive the cash bonuses. Dela Rosa told fellow officers to just wait if
there would be cash incentives for them from the government.
On being more careful
with his pronouncements in the future, Dela Rosa said it could not be helped
because he is “a transparent person.”
Several members of the
PNP were disgruntled when they learned only high-ranking officials have cash
gifts from the President.
PNP spokesman Senior
Supt. Dionardo Carlos assured every policeman they will receive their
performance-based bonuses this year. “No one will be left out,” he said.
On the part of the
military, Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana said he is not asking for an extra
Christmas bonanza for senior military officers.
“It’s up to the
President if he will give or not. I don’t know if we too will have the extra
bonus because the President has not been coming over to us (at Camp Aguinaldo).
But I am not asking him for that,” Lorenzana said.
Lorenzana said he was
not even aware about the extra Christmas gift for the police as announced by
Dela Rosa.
When asked if he too
is hoping for the cash gift like that of the PNP, Lorenzana said he is not
losing hope.
Col. Edgard Arevalo,
AFP Public Affairs Office chief, said there no is such extra bonus in the
military. Arevalo said that as far as the military is concerned, the entire
rank and file is happy with the President’s full support to the entire
organization to accomplish its mission.
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