World

Ressa’s Nobel Prize proof press freedom alive in Philippines: Duterte aide

Nonetheless, Harry Roque describes journo critical of govt as ‘convicted felon’

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 11 Oct 2021 7:00PM

Ressa’s Nobel Prize proof press freedom alive in Philippines: Duterte aide
Government critic Maria Ressa co-founded the Rappler website, which the Philippine president has slammed as a ‘fake news outlet’. – AFP pic, October 11, 2021

MANILA – A top aide to Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte today said the awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize to journalist and government critic Maria Ressa is proof that “press freedom is alive” in the country.

Ressa, co-founder of news portal Rappler, and Russian journalist Dmitry Muratov were awarded the prize on Friday for their efforts to “safeguard freedom of expression”.

Since Duterte took power in 2016, Ressa and Rappler have faced a series of criminal charges and investigations in what media advocates have described as state harassment over their reporting, including on the government’s deadly drug war. 

Duterte has called Rappler a “fake news outlet”, and Ressa has been the target of abusive messages online.

“It’s a victory for a Filipina, and we’re very happy for that,” Duterte’s spokesman Harry Roque told a regular briefing. 

“Press freedom is alive, and the proof is the Nobel Prize award to Maria Ressa,” he said, in the presidential palace’s first public comments on the award. 

Philippine press groups and rights activists have hailed Ressa’s prize as a “triumph” in a country ranked as one of the world’s most dangerous for journalists.

Ressa, 58, told AFP in an interview on Saturday that she is still battling seven court cases, including an appeal against a cyber libel conviction, for which she faces up to six years in prison.

Two other cyber libel cases were dismissed earlier this year.

Ressa, who is also a United States citizen, said she hopes the prize will help shield her and other journalists in the Philippines against physical attacks and online threats.

“This ‘us against them’ was never the creation of journalists; it was the creation of the people in power who wanted to use a type of leadership that divides society.

“I hope... this allows journalists to do our jobs well, without fear.”

Roque denied that the government has created a “chilling effect” for media outlets, saying anyone who claimed as such “should not be a journalist”.

He also rejected suggestions that Ressa’s Nobel Prize is “a slap” to the government, insisting that “no one has ever been censored in the Philippines”.

“Maria Ressa still has to clear her name before our courts,” he said, calling her a “convicted felon”.

“We leave it to our courts to decide on her fate.” – AFP, October 11, 2021

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