Sponsored Links
Tera Gold
Dresses
Diablo 3 Gold
China Wholesale
Bluetooth Headset
Fashion Bridal Dresses
HOME     |     LATEST STORIES     |     OPINION & ANALYSIS     |     SPECIAL REPORTS     |     MULTIMEDIA     Video     Slideshow     Audio/Podcasts     Webcasts
May 24, 2012
Manila, Philippines
Support progressive journalism.
Donate to Bulatlat.
SLIDESHOW Women slam Aquino’s inaction on price hikes
VIDEO On Labor Day, Workers call on Aquino to implement pro-people policies
STREET SHOOTER
Street Shooter: Old and New
SALUNGGUHIT Salungguhit: The face of poverty and struggle
PHOTO OF THE WEEK
Photo of the week: Sidewalk fast food
TOP STORIES
Southern Tagalog human rights situation worsening – Karapatan-ST
Negros farmers suffer atrocities from ‘landlord-hired bandit group’
Groups score continuing rights abuses as Philippines undergoes review by UN body
OPINION
A plea for plain justice and a dash of humanity
Abused and unused
The Yankees are back
MUST-READS
Anti-mining campaign gaining ground in Ilocos
Five years of searching for Jonas Burgos
Philippines tops list of world’s most disaster-hit countries in 2011
BROWSE BY SECTION OR SUBJECT
Politics
Economy
Human Rights
OFWs & Migration
Agrarian Reform
Labor & Employment
Urban Poor
Environment
Education
Youth
Indigenous Peoples
Women & Children
Health
Media
Culture
Poetry
Analysis & Opinion
Regions
International
Democratic Space
Press Releases
Downloads


Media urged to help end vilification

Published on August 31, 2011

By KIMBERLIE OLMAYA NGABIT QUITASOL
www.nordis.net

BAGUIO CTIY—Activists and progressive organizations urged media practitioners to join them in the campaign to put an end to vilification due to political beliefs through fair and responsible reporting.

In a roundtable discussion on vilification or red-labeling with media practitioners initiated by Dinteg (Cordillera Indigenous Peoples’ Legal Center) and Hustisya-Northern Luzon (an organization of families of victims of human rights violations), in partnership with the European Union, activists called on media practitioners to be careful in using terms especially those crafted by the Armed Forces of the Philippines to describe activists and legitimate organizations and to present the military side of the story.

The groups pointed out that the media may be unwittingly contributing to the vilification of activists and progressive organizations in using AFP terminologies.

Satur Ocampo, president of Makabayan and a seasoned journalist, said that the use of terms like “communist-terrorists” helps spread the military’s propaganda of equating legitimate organizations to terrorist groups.

He added that by parroting the baseless military description of activist groups that labels them as “fronts of the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP)-National Democratic Front of the Philippines (NDFP)-New People’s Army (NPA),” the media is helping to wrongly condition public perception about these organizations.

Ocampo reiterated the need to talk to editors and managers to correct these terminologies.

Editha Burgos, mother of Jonas Burgos, a victim of enforced disappearance, appealed to the media to always practice objective reporting. “While it is true that you have to put out the position of government, you should also get the other side,” she emphasized.

Burgos also recognized that the media has been playing a big role in the continuing campaign for the surfacing of her son. She urged the media to give similar assistance to other human rights victims, to give them space in their papers and programs.

Dinteg Executive Director Rhoda Dalang said that even media practitioners have become victims of vilification. She said that journalists reporting on sensitive issues are also being vilified and even killed.

Dalang reiterated that vilification is actually part of the counter-insurgency program of the government patterned after the United States’ “war on terror.” She explained that it is part of an attempt to redefine international human rights standards to justify acts of enforced disappearances and extrajudicial killings.

She added that this practice showed in the implementation of Oplan Bantay Laya I and II of the Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo administration where systematic vilification of activists preceded the abductions, killings and illegal arrests.

She further said that the Aquino government’s counter insurgency program called Oplan Bayanihan says nothing about putting an end to vilification.

It can be recalled that United Nations Rapporteur on Extrajudicial Killings Professor Philip Alston in March 2007 identified two causes of extrajudicial killings in the country: one is vilification and the other is the extent of counter insurgency operations.
Reposted by (http://bulatlat.com)

RELATED CONTENT

CHESTCORE condemns renewed threats on staff day before SONA

Resigned PNA President Scolds Complainants

ARTICLE TOOLS
Printer-Friendly Version Printer-Friendly Version

TAGS
, , ,
CATEGORIES
REPRINT
Feel free to reprint, repost or republish this material. (Read Bulatlat's syndication policy.)

2 Responses to “Media urged to help end vilification”

  1. reflections 32707 Says:

    http://socketforking.com/news/story.php?title=reflections-apartments

  2. Vilification of activists continues with Oplan Bayanihan Says:

    [...] Media urged to help end vilification [...]

Leave a Comment

HUMAN RIGHTS
Groups score continuing rights abuses as Philippines undergoes review by UN body
Rights groups to file complaint vs Aquino administration
Victim files opposition to promotion of military torturers
MIGRANTS
Family questions circumstances surrounding death of OFW in Singapore
Actress Jodi Sta. Maria joins Migrante in demanding justice for OFW killed in Mongolia
Migrante sounds alarm against illegal deportation of OFW trade union leader from South Korea
LABOR
Violations of workers’ rights, getting worse – rights group
Radio network employees gear for strike against union-busting
Workers call labor department’s order against contractualization ‘a hoax’
NEWS IN PICTURES


Actress Jodi Sta. Maria joins Migrante in demanding justice for OFW killed in Mongolia (Photo by Brett Jelinek / Bulatlat.com)

REGIONS
Environmentalists hail Baguio City’s ‘ban’ on SM tree-cutting
Governor hits open pit mining in Bontoc
Mining confab declares: “Philippines is not for sale”
INTERNATIONAL
The End of the End of Austerity We’re All Greeks Now
Globalism’s Perverse Rewards: World’s Apex Bully Leads World Into Lawlessness
European People Have Rejected Austerity Madness: Will the U.S. Get the Message
INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
Advocacy group for indigenous peoples pushes agenda for education
Cordillera Day 2012 focuses on mining and militarization
Killed indigenous leader Jimmy Liguyon’s family continue fight for justice
MULTIMEDIA


Video: Workers slam Aquino’s empty speech on Labor Day

Slideshow: Women slam Aquino’s inaction on price hikes


Slideshow: Workers call on Aquino to implement pro-people policies

ON THE FRINGES
The miracle of breast milk
For Dana Marie
CULTURE
GLOC-9: Nang magkatinig ang pipi
Performing Alan Jazmines: a reflection on his prison poem
Professor urges teaching of Ibaloi language
FULL COVERAGE
Wages and Labor Issues
Price Increases
GPH-NDFP Peace Talks
2010 Yearender
Morong 43
Aquino's First 100 Days
Hacienda Luisita
Ampatuan Massacre
Home         Subscribe (RSS or Email)        About Us        Donate         Contact Us         Archive         Advertise with Bulatlat
Copyright © 2009 Alipato Media Center Inc.         Read Bulatlat's Syndication Policy         Web design and hosting by Web Host Philippines