Breaking omerta silence | Inquirer News

Breaking omerta silence

/ 06:58 AM June 18, 2011

The story hasn’t made evening newscasts until now. And it took the newspapers almost half a year to report that three major networks were fined for reckless coverage of the Luneta hostage-taking. The crossfire left nine dead and the country nursing an international black-eye.

The Kapisanan ng mga Brodkaster ng Pilipinas (KBP) slammed a P30,000 fine each on ABS-CBN Broadcasting Channel 2, Radyo Mo Nationwide (RMN) and TV5. They aired “information that could have compromised police efforts to rescue the hostages,” KBP’s Standards Authority ruled.

RMN’s Michael Rogas and Erwin Tulfo were fined P15,000 and P10,000 each. They butted into negotiations between police and hostage-taker. In the process, they fractured the industry’s own code of conduct. They should be reprimanded.

Article continues after this advertisement

Broadcasters “shall not put lives in greater danger than is inherent in (hostage taking or kidnapping),” Section 6 of said Code provides.

FEATURED STORIES

“Care should be taken, so as not to hinder or obstruct efforts of authorities to resolve the situation.”

On Aug. 23 last year, cashiered Philippine National Police officer Rolando Mendoza flagged down a tour bus in Rizal Park. He took hostage all on board: 20 Hong-Kong tourists, plus five tour personnel. Why? He wanted his job back.

Article continues after this advertisement

Droves of police, reporters and istambays scampered into the crime scene. After a 10-hour standoff, police mounted an assault— tracked on nationwide TV. When the smoke cleared, eight of the hostages and Mendoza were stiffs.

Article continues after this advertisement

The victims were unlawfully killed, Philippine and Hong-Kong probers concluded: A Philippine panel skewered officials who “botched handling” of the crisis. KBP launched an internal probe following criticism of media conduct.

Article continues after this advertisement

“The drive for ratings and viewership has replaced public welfare as the media’s priority,” 170 faculty, staff, and students declared at a UP College of Mass Communication forum. “It was appalling that the live coverage was done, not to help the public make sense of the situation, but to milk it for all it is worth.”

Maria Ressa, then ABS-CBN senior vice president for news and current affairs, offered the UP forum a different perspective from the beat: The Luneta standoff highlighted the “struggle between journalists, whose goal is to tell the story, and authorities who must resolve the situation.”

Article continues after this advertisement

Authorities failed to control onlookers, she added. Nor did it lay guidelines for media. “When there are no rules, we push for what we can get. And the dynamics of having hundreds of journalists doing that can push it too far.

“ABS-CBN would have heeded a news blackout if it was called,” she recalled. It was a “second-by-second, minute-per-minute permutation of about 200 people trying to work together to try to put limitations in a situation where there was none.”

The networks lost their appeals before the KBP’s 13-member Standards Authority last April. Since then, an omerta-like silence blanketed this effort to put spine in rhetoric about self-regulation—until the Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility and Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism spoke up.

PCIJ reported the fines. It circulated all eight documents underpinning the KBP decision. “Ten months, nine lives and a flurry of finger-pointing and paperwork later, the controversy over the media coverage of the 2010 Luneta hostage-taking incident has come down to feeble fines of P30,000,” PCIJ noted. “(This is) a virtual slap on the wrist.”

CMFR called on KBP to review its mind-set as far as non-members are concerned. That referred to criticism lodged over equally reckless coverage of the hostage-taking by GMA Network Inc. Channel 7. In 2003, GMA-7 stalked out of KBP in a dispute over KBP commercial loading limits.

Tighten up the Broadcast Code provision on “crime and crisis situations,” CMFR urged. “The public interest requires it.” The future of self-regulation in the Philippine media is affected.

“Know the past to understand the present,” astronomer Carl Sagan once said. Look at how far KBP has moved since 2008. The Supreme Court then castigated KBP, in the National Telecommunications Commission case, as being a rubber stamp for Malacañang’s squeeze on press freedom.

The Court struck down NTC memos that threatened to suspend or scrub franchises of stations airing the “Garci tapes.” These were wiretapped tapes of talks between President Arroyo and election officials on her Mindanao votes.

NTC memos constituted unconstitutional prior restraint on the exercise of freedom of speech and the press, the tribunal concluded. It nullified them forthwith.

“Given the crucial issues involved, the Court found it peculiar that broadcasters, most affected by NTC letter,” didn’t even whimper. Nor did they intervene.

Instead, KBP whitewashed NTC, saying, “The memorandum did not constitute restraint of press freedom—totally at variance with the Court’s findings.”

“Petitioner (Francisco Chavez) was left alone,” the decision notes. “This silence on the sidelines of some media practitioners is too deafening to be the subject of misinterpretation.”

There are no freedoms so dangerous as those that are not exercised, Viewpoint noted then. “The broadcast watchdog here didn’t bark.”

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our daily newsletter

By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy.

Now, is KBP starting to bite? OK. So a P30,000 fine is peanuts. But a KBP that refuses to be patted as an obsequious lapdog by politicians is welcome. There are other brawls around the corner for us who work in this complex craft. That rightly bugs PCIJ and CMFR.

TAGS: Media

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our newsletter!

By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy.

© Copyright 1997-2024 INQUIRER.net | All Rights Reserved

This is an information message

We use cookies to enhance your experience. By continuing, you agree to our use of cookies. Learn more here.