AMARC Calls Upon the Philippines Government to Stop Killings of Journalists
and Broadcasters 

 

June 28, 2010. Kathmandu. The World Association of Community Radio
Broadcasters-Asia Pacific (AMARC-AP) condemns the recent killings of three
more journalists last week, two of whom were fellow broadcasters, in the
Philippines.  The deaths of Desiderio Camangyan of Sunrise FM (Davao) last
June 14, Joselito Agustin of DzJC Aksyon Radyo (Ilocos Norte) last June 16,
and Nestor Bedolido of Kastigado Newspaper (Digos City) last June 20 bring
the number of journalists killed under the outgoing Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo
regime to 104.  

 

We hold the outgoing administration morally liable for allowing the
Philippines to become the most dangerous country for journalists.  On the
average, one journalist was killed every month in the last nine years.  This
fact calls to question the country's claim as one of the region's oldest
democracies.  To date, 141 journalists were killed since the baseline year
of 1986 when the dictatorship of Ferdinand Marcos was ousted.

 

It is more lamentable that very few cases have been successfully prosecuted.
Even the Philippine Secretary of Justice initially wanted to absolve two
suspected perpetrators of the Ampatuan Massacre that killed 33 journalists
last November.  We are also alarmed that one of the witnesses to the most
shocking crime against journalists in history was killed last June June 22,
endangering the quest for justice.  AMARC-AP has condemned the massacre in a
unanimously-approved resolution last February in Bangalore, India on the
occasion of our second regional conference.

 

We enjoin AMARC-AP's collective voice with local and international media and
human rights organizations in seeking justice for all victims of media
killings and attacks in the Philippines. AMARC-AP calls on the incoming
Benigno Aquino administration to stop the killings of journalists and other
innocent civilians and to prosecute suspects in all the killings.  We also
urge the new government to immediately implement a program that would
encourage the establishment and unencumbered operation of community radio
broadcasting in the Philippines.

 

As the world's biggest broadcasting movement with more than 5,000 member
community broadcasting stations and advocates worldwide, AMARC believes that
democracy and social justice is only achievable when there is a free press.


 

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About AMARC:

AMARC is an international non-governmental organization serving the
community radio movement in over 110 countries, and advocating for the right
to communicate at the international, national, local and neighbourhood
levels. AMARC has an International Secretariat in Montreal. It has regional
sections in Africa, Latin America and Asia Pacific and offices in
Johannesburg, Buenos Aires, Brussels, and Kathmandu. For more information,
please contact Suman Basnet, Regional Coordinator for Asia-Pacific,
[log in to unmask] or visit www.asiapacific.amarc.org
<http://www.asiapacific.amarc.org/> .