PHILIPPINES: Media groups see political motive behind dropping of journalists murder charges
Monday, 19 April 2010
The Southeast Press Alliance (SEAPA) joins one of its founding members, the Manila-based Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility, in denouncing the recent order of acting Justice Secretary Alberto Agra to remove two prominent members of the Ampatuan clan--Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) Governor Zaldy Ampatuan Zaldy and Mamasapano Mayor Datu Akmad Ampatuan from the multiple murder charge sheet in connection with the massacre last year of 57 civilians (including 32 journalists) in Mindanao.


Despite Agra's statements that his decision was based on legal grounds, we in SEAPA see the Secretary's order as a confirmation why impunity reigns in the Philippines--political convenience trumps justice.

The full text of the CMFR statement:

The Real Obscenity

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Nude members of a university fraternity make their way through a crowd of students during the traditional 'Oblation Run' at the University of the Philippines campus in suburban Manila on 15 December 2009 to protest against the Ampatuan massacre of journalists in the southern part of the country. AFP PHOTO/JAY DIRECTO,Source WAN-IFRA
(Statement of the Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility on the Agra order to drop the multiple murder charges against Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) Governor Zaldy Ampatuan Zaldy and Mamasapano Mayor Datu Akmad Ampatuan in connection with the Ampatuan Massacre)

The order of acting Justice Secretary Alberto Agra for state prosecutors to drop the multiple murder charges against Zaldy and Akmad Ampatuan in connection with the Ampatuan Massacre of 2009 has understandably aroused suspicions of political interference.

Deputy presidential spokesman Gary Olivar has described these suspicions and outright allegations as "an obscenity." But the real and current obscenity in this country is the fact that the alleged president for whom Olivar speaks has become central to the major issues that beset this country, most particularly that of whether there will be a change in its putrid leadership rather than more of the same despite the 2010 elections.

Why the country has reached this point is clear: Gloria Macapagal Arroyo has demonstrated time and again that no method is too mean and no tactic too low for her to use in her drive to remain in power, and that includes committing the worst travesties against the very institutions--whether the police, the military or the justice system--that sustain State power.

Gloria Macapagal Arroyo would rather that the public forget it, but there is no denying that the Ampatuans were, and could still be, her political allies, and that their help could be crucial in insuring the victory of the ruling coalition's candidates at both the national and local levels.

The political imperative rather than the legal one is thus evident in Secretary Agra's attempt to justify his order. His predecessor had ruled that there was "probable cause" that the two Ampatuans were involved in the conspiracy to waylay, abduct and kill the 57 men and women in the Mangudadatu convoy last November 23.

Whether either Ampatuan or both Ampatuans were actually present during the massacre is an incidental issue. If they were part of the conspiracy, their knowledge of and involvement in its planning constitutes the "probable cause" that Agra's predecessor concluded existed as far as the two Ampatuans were concerned. It is that which must be established or proven false during the trial. Despite all this Agra still issued the order, thus the universal suspicion that Malacaņang had told him to do so.

But there is not much point in belaboring the obvious. In the face of this most recent outrage against both justice and democracy, the media need to take this issue to the rest of Philippine society, and to bring to the attention of the Filipino people the impending travesty the Arroyo regime is once more poised to commit. The press too needs to support the public prosecutors protesting Agra's order, and it needs to engage law groups as well as the rest of civil society not only in condemning the order, but even more importantly, in demanding that he recall it. For this the press and everyone else must take to the streets if necessary.

 

SOURCE


The Southeast Asian Press Alliance (http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=P5eF_&m=1bJSqCH8jDKXin&b=zK1X5WjiitTZ.Gyy7hAdug) is a coalition of press freedom advocacy groups from Indonesia, the Philippines and Thailand. Established in November 1998, it is the only regional network with the specific mandate of promoting and protecting press freedom throughout Southeast Asia. SEAPA is composed of the Alliance of Independent Journalists (Indonesia), the Jakarta-based Institute for the Study of the Free Flow of Information (ISAI), the Manila-based Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility, the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism, and the Thai Journalists Association. SEAPA also has partners in Malaysia, Cambodia, East Timor, and exiled Burmese media, and undertakes projects and programs for press freedom throughout the region.


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