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Media attacks: Accelerating the curve of impunity

STATEMENT

WHILE THE DUTERTE REGIME is failing to flatten the curve of the coronavirus’ spread, it is accelerating the curve of another mounting pandemic afflicting the nation – the pandemic of impunity.

State forces are relentlessly pursuing attacks against the freedom of expression and of the press, mere days after mounting its most massive offensive yet – that of shutting down the largest media network in the Philippines, ABS-CBN.

The month of May ushered in a deluge of new attacks, not only to the media community, but also even to Filipino citizens, many of whom were only performing civic duties by mounting relief efforts for those severely affected by the COVID-19 lockdown.

On April 30, Bayan Muna Iloilo coordinator Jory Porquia was shot dead by unidentified armed men in his rented home at Arevalo in Iloilo City. Porquia was heading several relief missions in Iloilo City days before his death. In the aftermath of the gruesome killing, family, supporters, and progressive groups mounted a caravan to call for justice – yet that caravan led to the arrest of 42 activists, including seven community journalists.

The attacks in Panay even escalated after Porquia’s death. Reports of surveillance of activists grew in the past days. One of the key incidents involved Panay journalist John Alenciaga, who was the subject of several vilification posts in social media by suspected state agents, tagging him as a member of the Communist Party of the Philippines.

This is not the first time that Alenciaga became the subject of such attack. Back in 2018 and 2019, Alenciaga was repeatedly included in several online and physical posters accusing him and several others as being a “terrorist” and “extortionist.” In November 2019, he also reported being tailed by two men who followed him throughout the day, even to his doctor’s appointment.

The latest online poster against Alenciaga that circulated after the mass arrest of Iloilo 42 read, “fake media”, with a photoshopped photo of Alenciaga wearing a red hammer-and-sickle bandanna.

We in the Altermidya Network fiercely condemn this nonstop harassment against our colleague. Alenciaga is the Panay coordinator of Altermidya, and is among the tireless community journalists in the region. He is also an editor of Panay Today and the weekly anchor of the radio program Dampig Katarungan aired over Aksyon Radyo Iloilo. Like his colleagues, he is active in reporting issues faced by communities in Panay, regularly raising the alarm on human rights violations and abuse of power in the region.

Elsewhere, the attacks continue to escalate. Mere days after the commemoration of World Press Freedom Day, Dumaguete City radio anchor Cornelio Pepino, better known as “Rex Cornelio,” was shot dead by unidentified men on May 5 while he was on the way home. Cornelio is known for being an ardent critic of the local government of Negros Oriental, exposing in his radio shows various issues of overpricing in government projects and other anomalies.

At the national level, state forces are adding insult to the injury in the aftermath of the ABS-CBN shutdown. On May 8, the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-ELCAC) posted “info materials” against ABS-CBN and Rappler’s Maria Ressa– a malicious and treacharous propaganda attack against the two media outfits.

In later pronouncements, Communications Secretary Martin Andanar admitted that the posts containing false information about Maria Ressa and ABS-CBN were shared by official social media accounts of state agencies “without the usual vetting” process. But the vilification has already been done.

Palace spokespersons are quick to denounce people and groups whom they say are spreading “disinformation in the time of the pandemic.” Yet it is the Duterte administration itself that is guilty of such, and much more. Not only has the administration cut the main source of information and news for many Filipinos by shutting down ABS-CBN, but state forces have literally cut and endanger lives of those who only seek to report what’s happening on the ground.

Amid this public health crisis, information is vital to curb the spread of the pandemic. To curve COVID-19 – medical solutions, accompanied by wide public dissemination of information – is key. Accelerating the curve of impunity is not tantamount to flattening the curve of the pandemic. Only delusional, power-hungry, opportunistic leaders would think such.

We in the independent media continue to reaffirm our commitment: we will not back down from reporting the truth. As the attacks escalate, so should our dissent. We shall flatten the curve of impunity through our resolve to fight back!

The post Media attacks: Accelerating the curve of impunity appeared first on AlterMidya.

Philippines has not flattened the curve – experts

“What we want to see is how this ECQ is being used to stop the spread of the virus and not just to incarcerate the people in their homes while the government is not making any effort to aggressively conduct mass testing.”

By RITCHE T. SALGADO
Bulatlat.com

MANILA – After nearly two months of enhanced community quarantine in Luzon, the Philippines has not yet flattened the curve.

This was the statement of the Citizens Urgent Response to End COVID-19 (CURE Covid), contrary to earlier statements of an epidemiologist working with the Inter-Agency Task Force for Emerging Infectious Diseases.

Dr. Felix Muga II, a mathematics professor from Ateneo de Manila University, said that the number of positive cases of COVID-19 is still increasing. He added that with the large number of backlog tests of around 2,500, it would be difficult to ascertain that we have contained the disease.

“If this is what is happening everyday, how could we say that the curve has been flattened?” Muga said in a recent press briefing organized by CURE Covid.

Flattening the curve refers to efforts to slow down an outbreak and make it more manageable. It also refers to how a line graph looks when the number of new cases daily is no longer increasing or has stayed low.

Dr. Felix Muga, Ateneo math professor, belied claims that the Philippines has flattened the curve.

Muga pointed out three factors that would determine if the curve in the number of cases have been flattened – the daily incidence, doubling rate or the amount of time it takes for the number of cases to double, and the reproduction number.

The reproduction number is the number of individuals that would be infected by a COVID-19 patient. “It is important that when we say that we have flattened the rate, the reproduction number should be less than one,” he said.

“An example would be if of five COVID-19 patients, only three of them are able to infect others, that means our reproduction rate is less than 1,” he said. “At the moment, we are still hovering above one, so the curve has not been flattened.”

Dr. Julie Caguiat of the Coalition for People’s Right to Health also pointed out three elements in the fight against the COVID-19 pandemic, which she believed the government should prioritize – mass testing, a healthy health system, and positive social determinants of health.

Caguiat pointed out that it was only at the end of March that the government recognized the need for mass testing, and it was only on April 14, a month after the enhanced community quarantine was imposed in Metro Manila, that they actually started with the testing.

She added that the 23 testing centers nationwide can only do as much as 7,000 tests per day, which is way below the government’s target of 30,000 tests per day.

Caguiat added that most of these testing centers are in the National Capital Region, while those in the provinces are only able to serve limited patients because of the lack of testing kits and the slow delivery of the kits from the head office.

In Baguio, for example, the testing center can only do 10 tests per day.

She also pointed out that testing, as of the moment is only given to critical cases and not even health workers who are regularly exposed to COVID-19 patients are given regular tests.

“If we want to see the real picture of the spread of the disease, then the test must be given to a wider population,” she said.

Former Social Welfare and Development Secretary and CURE Covid-19 spokesperson Dr. Judy Taguiwalo said that when it comes to testing, it must be given for free, adding that even the Red Cross are asking for payment of around P3,500 per test.

A reflection of a desperate health system

Caguiat said that our inability to control the spread of COVID-19 is reflective of the desperate state of our health system.

Caguiat underscored how ill-prepared the government has been before the first case of COVID-19 was detected in the country. She said that by March, the spread of the disease has become uncontrollable, affecting even our doctors and nurses.

“We should have prepared for this, but even now we are having difficulty addressing the needs of our health workers and hospitals,” she said.

Caguiat said that even before the COVID-19 pandemic, they have been pushing for the government to increase the manpower of government hospitals, that the 17,000 available plantillas would be filled in, and for the deployment of 42,000 nurses to the communities.

“Now, COVID-designated hospitals are in need of 6,000 health professionals, but the Department of Health has only hired 750 personnel. Slow and limited,” she said.

Caguiat added that personal protective equipment (PPEs), ventilators and other equipment are lacking even in hospitals catering to COVID-19 patients.

Taguiwalo said that the government is making an effort to flatten the curve, it should also make an effort to raise the line in terms of improving the health system in the country.

“They are interconnected,” Taguiwalo said.

Social determinants of health

She stressed that in the fight against the pandemic, it is the people that is the most important element.

The community doctor said the poor, senior citizens and persons with disability are the most vulnerable to the disease and even to stress and anxiety at this time.

That is why, she said, that government must be able to clearly and effectively communicate information about the virus, the disease and even their plans in fighting the disease, especially when the planned lifting of the enhanced community quarantine in the region is fast approaching.

“Even if it takes a long time to find a solution to the pandemic, the government should not overlook the question of the people’s livelihood, their rights, housing, education, all of these are connected with how we address this problem,” she said.

Quarantine extension, difficult for the poor

However, they clarified that this doesn’t mean that the quarantine should also be extended.

Caguiat said that because we were not ready to face the pandemic, the government resorted to quarantine to be able to make up for its inefficiency in addressing the problem.

“The national government should dialogue with the local government,” Caguiat said. “There are some areas where the quarantine can already be lifted, but even then, the mass testing should be continuous.”

Muga also highlighted the importance of mass testing in the decision to lift the quarantine, as this would give us a better picture of the situation. Even so, he said that the lifting of the ECQ should be localized depending on the capacity and the situation of the place.

“What we want to see is how this ECQ is being used to stop the spread of the virus and not just to incarcerate the people in their homes while the government is not making any effort to aggressively conduct mass testing,” she said.

“We want the ECQ to be lifted, but we don’t want to risk our most vulnerable population to be exposed to the virus that is why there should be free mass testing together with a proper system for contact tracing, isolation and relief for those who really are in need,” Taguiwalo said.(https://www.bulatlat.com)

The post Philippines has not flattened the curve – experts appeared first on Bulatlat.

Bulatlatan | Far from home: OFWs caught in pandemic

Modern day heroes? For decades, their remittances have kept the country’s economy afloat. But in this Bulatlatan episode, overseas Filipino workers in UK and Canada discuss the impacts of COVID-19 pandemic to their lives and jobs and the apparent lack of government assistance they are receiving. (https://www.bulatlat.com)

The post Bulatlatan | Far from home: OFWs caught in pandemic appeared first on Bulatlat.

Balik-Tanaw Sunday Gospel Reflection | 5th Sunday of Easter: Don’t Be Troubled

Boy Domingiez’s painting

By Deaconess Sharon David McCart
United Methodist Church 

We are living in difficult times. The threat comes not only from Covid-19 but also from food shortages and extrajudicial killings, of being imprisoned (justly or unjustly) in overcrowded conditions. Too many of us know someone who has died during this pandemic. Too many of us are going hungry. Many of us are without jobs and have no way to buy food even if we could find it. Some of us are ill and unable to get medicine and care.

Against this reality, we may ask about these words that Christ spoke:

“Don’t be troubled. Trust in God. Trust also in me.” (John 14:1, CEB)

It is difficult to avoid being troubled or worried. Even if we trust in God, we may be anxious. We may wonder even more when we read the next verse, in which Christ says that “I go to prepare a place for you!” Maybe we are not quite ready to go to that place yet!

The disciples were also unable to avoid worry and anxiety, just as we are. Christ had just shared the last supper with them and was saying things they didn’t understand, that where he was going they couldn’t follow now, but they would follow later. They were confused. His words were troubling them. So we are not alone in being troubled in difficult times.

No matter how worried we are by today’s circumstances, we know that people (including many of us!) are taking food to the hungry and caring for others in whatever ways we can, often at risk to ourselves. We are still serving others as we choose day by day, minute by minute to follow Christ. As he went to the cross and as the disciples preached the Gospel in the face of persecution, we are obedient to the command to love our neighbors even when it is dangerous, even if we are afraid.

Christ told us something that we may find hard to believe. He said, “I assure you that whoever believes in me will do the works that I do. They will do even greater works than these because I am going to the Father.” (John 14:12). We may say that only Christ can do great works, that we cannot. But we never know what we can do if we pray and then act. If we “pray with our hands and feet,” we can save lives, we can restore hope, we can be the answer to someone else’s prayer.

When we collect donations that make it possible to feed the hungry, we are multiplying the loaves and fish. When we show that we care about the marginalized by our deeds as well as our words, we can think about it as turning water into wine. When we reach out to the suffering, offering our time and our compassion, we are restoring people to society just as Christ did when he healed the hemorrhaging woman, the lepers, the man living in the graveyard, and more.

The psalmist tells us that God’s love will “deliver their lives from death and keep them alive during a famine.” (Psalm 33:19). We are called by God to love others for this purpose. We are obeying the command to love our neighbors as ourselves by feeding people who would otherwise starve to death.

When we are following Christ, acting as his hands, feet, and heart in this world, we will find hope. When we are serving others, our hearts will be less troubled.

And perhaps we can find a way to sing the Lord’s song in this strange land we find ourselves living in. How can we keep from singing, even in this time of trouble and anxiety? God loves us, calls us, cares for us, strengthens us, guides us. Praise God for his faithfulness to us!

This hymn is in my heart today. It was written over one hundred years ago by Robert Lowry, with words added by Pete Seeger. Maybe it will speak to your heart as well.

“My life flows on in endless song
Above Earth’s lamentation
I hear the real, though far off hymn
That hails the new creation
Above the tumult and the strife
I hear the music ringing;
It sounds an echo in my soul
How can I keep from singing?

What though the tempest loudly roars
I hear the truth, it liveth
What though the darkness round me close
Songs in the night it giveth
No storm can shake my inmost calm
While to that rock I’m clinging
Since love is lord of Heaven and Earth
How can I keep from singing?

When tyrants tremble, sick with fear
And hear their death-knell ringing
When friends rejoice both far and near
How can I keep from singing?

In prison cell and dungeon vile
Our thoughts to them are winging
When friends by shame are undefiled
How can I keep from singing?”

(Link: https://genius.com/Pete-seeger-how-can-i-keep-from-singing-lyrics )

Balitktanaw is a group blog of Promotion of Church People’s Response. The Lectionary Gospel reflection is an invitation for meditation, contemplation, and action. As we nurture our faith by committing ourselves to journey with the people, we also wish to nourish the perspective coming from the point of view of hope and struggle of the people. It is our constant longing that even as crisis intensifies, the faithful will continue to strengthen their commitment to love God and our neighbor by being one with the people in their dreams and aspirations. The Title of the Lectionary Reflection would be Balik –Tanaw , isang PAGNINILAY . It is about looking back (balik) or revisiting the narratives and stories from the Biblical text and seeing ,reading, and reflecting on these with the current context(tanaw)

The post Balik-Tanaw Sunday Gospel Reflection | 5th Sunday of Easter: Don’t Be Troubled appeared first on Bulatlat.

Bus firm resumes operation to help medical frontliners

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With the travel restriction still in effect in many parts of Mindanao, a bus company resumed its operations to serve mainly the medical frontliners.

Paalam, Ma

Hindi ko na nabati ang nanay ko ng Happy Mother’s Day. Eksaktong isang buwan bago ang Mother’s Day ay binawian siya ng buhay dahil sa COVID-19. Mas minarapat kong hindi ibunyag iyon sa social media, sa publiko. Nabanggit ko lang ito sa iilang kaibigan at kasamahan na malalapit sa akin. Isa akong editorial cartoonist sa […]

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Journalism lessons from the tweets of Prof. Danny Arao

When the government forced ABS-CBN to go off the air on May 5, the public was dealt with a big, real-life lesson on press freedom. And for those who were unable to share the feeling of that harrowing moment when an indefinite black screen came up—a déjà vu from martial law—Prof. Danny Arao’s tweets is […]

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Anti-insurgency task force led by Duterte posts “fake news”, “trolls’ script” vs ABS-CBN franchise row

ABS-CBN reporters called out the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-ELCAC) when it made its own “info materials” and “posted fake news” on its Facebook page about the issue on ABS-CBN franchise. It was published hours after the online protests on #NoToABSCBNShutdown and #LabanKapamilya Facebook live event with ABS-CBN celebrities ended […]

The post Anti-insurgency task force led by Duterte posts “fake news”, “trolls’ script” vs ABS-CBN franchise row appeared first on Manila Today.