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February 21, 2007
IFJ calls on Arroyo
to drop sedition charges, focus on finding journalists’ killers
Sedition charges against three journalists in the Philippines have led
the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) to call for President
Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo to drop the charges and instead focus on promoting
a free and safe press by bringing to justice those responsible for the
slaying of 50 journalists since 2001.
The Philippine Department of Justice is proceeding to charge the publisher
and two columnists of The Daily Tribune newspaper with inciting to sedition,
rejecting their April 10 motion to dismiss the charges filed by the police.
According to reports, Ninez Cacho-Olivarez and columnists Ramon Señeres
and Herman Tiu-Laurel were charged on February 14 with violating the Revised
Penal Code over articles critical of President Arroyo and her administration.
“It is disappointing that President Arroyo seems far more concerned
with utilising the courts to punish those who dare to criticise her administration,
rather than stamping out the culture of impunity that continues to plague
her government,” IFJ President Christopher Warren said.
“In fact, President Arroyo would be far better off to use the country’s
legal and police resources to find those responsible for the unlawful
murder of a sickening number of journalists rather than intimidating those
critical of the government,” Warren said.
Senior State Prosecutor Philip Kimpo is said to have alleged that articles
published in the paper tended to "lead or stir up the people against
the lawful authorities, namely, the president of the Philippines, and
disturb the peace of the community."
These latest charges follow a spate of libel cases brought before the
courts by the country’s First Gentleman, Jose Miguel Arroyo, who,
according to IFJ affiliate, the National Union of Journalists of the Philippines,
currently has 10 libel lawsuits against 45 journalists and other media
workers.
“The IFJ once again calls on President Arroyo to put an end to intimidation
tactics designed to silence the watchdog function of the media, to remove
libel from the criminal code, and to find and prosecute the killers of
the 50 journalists killed in the Philippines,” Warren said.
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