Friday, November 30, 2007

Manila Peninsula Drama

"Naglunch lang si Senador sa Manila Pen", replied one member from my Samasa Yahoogroups when somebody from abroad asked for a news update from back home.

It was anecdotal of the short lived attempt of Senator Antonio Trillanes and Brig. Gen. Danilo Lim to mount revolt against what they call a bogus President who won in an election marred by massive cheating. When he called for people's support to come to Makati after he walked out of the Makati City regional trial court, personalities identified with the opposition arrived in Manila Peninsula Hotel, like former Vice Pres. Teofisto Guingona, Novaliches Bishop Antonio Tobias, Infanta, Quezon Bishop Emeritus Julio Labayen, former University of the Philippines president Francisco Nemenzo, "running" priest Robert Reyes, columnist Herman Tiu Laurel and Atty. Argee Guevarra among others. Of course media people have been with them from the start of their court hearing and marching all the way to Manila Peninsula for a blow by blow coverage that ended having themselves handcuffed and dragged to Camp Bagong Diwa in Taguig City along with the Magdalo soldiers.

Listening from one radio station to another as I drove back to Makati at the height of the incident, I heared the Phil. National Police Chief appeal to different media management to recall their personnel from the scene as they are about to engage with the holed up soldiers whose numbers almost equal with the media men covering them. Then I thought of the media person's moral obligation to be truth tellers, their constitutionally guaranteed vocation to freely inform the public of matters that concern them, just as the police has also the obligation to protect them while doing their duties. In a typical war, journalists, like members of the Red Cross, are not a potential enemy but allies of both warring parties in their pursuit for truth and human well-being.

As a student of journalism, I personally deplore the act of removing cameras from the TV crews and all forms of communication gadgets that were instruments of a continuous truth-telling work. Even more, the move to handcuff journalists suspecting them as Magdalo soldiers in disguise, those distinguishable faces you watch daily on TV, is the height of police ignorance, if not blind obedience at the expense of violating the basic rights of journalists to perform their duties protected by the
Bill of Rights specifically Section 4 and Sec. 7.

I sympathize with the cause of Sen. Trillanes for a corruption free, morally upright governance-- who else doesn't want that? Church leaders even call for it, senators and congressmen, too. But counter such media grandstanding in a high-end hotel with Simba armoured personnel carrier (APC), handcuff teargassed journalists and declare curfew at 12 midnight until 5:00am? If this is not what we locally call "kapraningan" or "sobra naman" then this might just be the beginning of the end of a story that should never be told.

Nakakahiya na kasi!

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Ei, Josh! Just so you know, Jesus Llanto was one of the journalists taken to Bicutan last night. He was able to text me back probably just before they left the hotel. Worried kami sa kanya kagabi!

Anonymous said...

I hope Jay is ok na. One of our reporters was also to Bicutan. Ganda ng exposure ni Jay! I wish i was also there.