Pacific Island Times Vol 3 No. 3 March 2019 | Page 4
FROM THE PUBLISHER’S DESK
History repeating itself
Publisher/Editor-in-Chief
A
n entirely new generation of Filipinos, without
realizing it, is seeing the resurgence of tyranny
that oppressed the country and muted its voice
for 14 years under military rule. Except that this one is
much more flagrant, taking utter pride in its homicidal
governance that thrives in the country’s chaotic version
of democracy.
The recent arrest of Maria Ressa is the latest display of
President Rodrigo Duterte’s Marcos-like rule. Ressa, the
co-founder and CEO of online news outlet Rappler, was
arrested on cyber-libel charges by the National Bureau
of Investigation at the Manila newsroom on Feb. 13. The
charges were based on a complaint filed with the NBI by
businessman over a Rappler report published on May 29,
2012, linking him to the impeached Supreme
Court chief justice Renato Corona.
The Cybercrime Prevention Act was passed
into law on Sept. 12, 2012, and went into
effect on Oct. 3, 2012. Rappler, however,
updated the story on Feb. 19, 2014, making it
“actionable,” according to the Department of
Justice which approved the filing of charges
against Ressa.
In an interview with CNN, Ressa said her
arrest on cyber libel charges demonstrated
the Duterte government’s use of law as a
weapon against his critics. “The only thing
I can think of is that the government wants
me to feel its power,” said Ressa, who was
among Time magazine’s “Person of the Year” honorees
for 2018.
Rappler became Duterte’s public enemy No. 1 when it
refused to stop its tenacious coverage of the president’s
bloody war on drugs, which reached a death toll of 5,000
as of December 2018. At one point, it reporters were
banned from covering the Office of the President. In the
Trumpesque fashion, Duterte called it a “fake news”
organization.
The cyber-libel case was the latest in a series of the
government’s attempts to shut it down. In January 2018,
Philippine securities and exchange commission revoked
Rappler’s license. It was the culmination of a six-month
case-building that began when Duterte, during his State
of the Union speech in July 2017, declared Rappler in
violation of the constitution because it was an Amer-
ican-owned entity. The court of appeals reversed the
commission’s action.
Then came the tax evasion case. A warrant for Res-
sa’s arrest was issued in November 2018 following the
government’s claim that Rappler owed $3 million in tax
on the company’s 2015 bond sales to two foreign parties.
Ressa turned herself in, posted bail and was released.
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Mar-Vic Cagurangan
[email protected]
Associate Editor
Bruce Lloyd
[email protected]
Associate Editor (Pacific Note/Palau)
Ongerung Kambes Kesolei
[email protected]
The case is still ongoing.
The arrest of journalists and crackdown on
critics are reminiscent of the Marcos dicta-
torship, when unfriendly newspapers were
shut down and journalists were incarcerated,
leaving only state-run news organizations to
peddle government propaganda, and allowing
the coverup of the regime’s shenanigans.
“It is unfortunate that 45 years since the
declaration of martial law, after 14 years of
suffering under military rule, it seems that
we have not learned,” Vice President Leni
Robledo said last year during a mass for the
victims of extrajudicial killings.
Sadly, Duterte’s dictatorial disposition is
supported by the masses of his cult followers— “the troll
army,” they are called — that propel his victory in the
culture wars.
Two revolutions and six presidents later, the Philip-
pines that said “Never Again” is again drawn to where
it was before 1986. It is becoming a clear case for the
philosopher George Santayana’s warning: “Those who
cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”
Sadly, Duterte’s dictatorial
disposition is supported
by the masses of his cult
followers— “the troll
army,” they are called —
that propel his victory in
the culture wars.
Contributing Writers
Raquel Bagnol
Zaldy Dandan
Jayne Flores
Theodore Lewis
Diana Mendoza
Joseph Meyers
Jonathan Perez
Alex Rhowuniong
Joy Santamarina
Johanna Salinas
Dianne Strong
Michelle Voacolo
Visual Editor
Mar-Vic Cagurangan
Sales and Marketing Executive
Jan SN Furukawa
[email protected]
Account Executive
Anna Marie Alegre
[email protected]
Administraitive Assistant
Lolita Therrel
[email protected]
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