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Saturday, November 17, 2012

Aquino berating media is becoming boring

By Ellen Tordesillas
Malaya

Berating media has become a habit for Aquino.

Why am I not surprised that the Freedom of Information bill in the House of Representatives has been declared dead in the 15th Congress by press freedom advocates?

Simple: President Aquino does not support it.

Despite the fact that he was product of media hype, he does not understand the role of media in governance and in strengthening democracy. Although he said when he was campaigning for the presidency in 2010 that he was going to support the FOI bill, he never included it among his administration’s priority measures.
Look back to his statements the past two years:
In Oct. 2011, before Southeast Asian leaders, Aquino said: “You know, having a freedom of information act sounds so good and noble but at the same time—I think you’ll notice that here in this country—there’s a tendency of getting information and not really utilizing it for the proper purposes.”
He complained that, “There are so many people who will always look at the bottle half-empty, or sometimes the half-empty bottle even becomes the quarter, quarter-full bottle.”
Earlier, in Nov. 2010, while attending the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation in Yokohama, Japan Aquino made the same complaint about media in his meeting with the Filipino community:
“Ang nangyayari kasi, para makuha ang atensyon ng karamihan, kinakamot nila nang kinakamot ang isang katiting na galos. Kahit naman sino, natural lang na nawalan ng ganang magtrabaho kung puro kapalpakan lamang ang nababalitaan,” he said.
Last year, in a YouTube worldwide interview, to a question by a 7-year-old boy if he believed in Santa Claus, his answer was to lambast media:
“Do I believe in Santa Claus? Santa Claus perhaps is a personification of… (the) best in people, the idea of generosity. The idea of caring does come out, at least for Christians during this period, most particularly and most shall we say strongly.
“More than anything, we really have to shift, to those of us still left (from) the criticize-anything-and-everything phase to transforming ourselves into how we can assist our neighbor, our sister, our brother or whoever, somebody we don’t even know.”
Berating media has become a habit for Aquino.The poor boy (Joshua) must have been confused with the President’s answer.
Less than a week after that YouTube interview, Aquino was again into media-bashing. In addressing the 37th Top Level management Conference of the Kapisanan ng mga Brodkaster ng Pilipinas at the Clark Freeport Zone in Pampanga, he focused on the rotten tomatos in media:
“Kailangan din nating aminin na hindi perpekto ang media, at tulad ng anumang institusyon na may lakas at impluwensya, may mga bulok na kamatis din, na sa kasamaang palad ay naihahalo dito. Bilang mga kalasag ng taumbayan sa tuwid na daan, tungkulin ng KBP at ng buong media na bantayan ang sarili ninyong hanay laban sa mga dumudungis sa inyong larangan.
“Silang mga nangingikil kapalit ang mabangong headline sa diyaryo, silang nambabaluktot ng balita upang mapaboran ang iilan, silang naghahasik ng mga walang-basehang tsismis at kasinungalingan para lamang mailayo ang atensyon ng taumbayan sa katotohanan. Kung katapatan at malasakit sa bayan ang sukatan ng pagiging lingkod-bayan, masusing pagsiyasat sa mga detalye at kredibilidad naman ang sukatan sa inyong larangan… Ang nakakadismaya lang, tila nakakalimutan ng ilang taga-media ang kanilang pangunahing tungkulin: ang maghayag ng katotohanan, at hindi para manghula o magluto ng balita.”
Yesterday, in this year’s KBP conference, Aquino did it again, lambasting media for not writing enough about the good things about his accomplishments.
No one was surprised. It’s getting boring.
He is insisting on the inclusion of Right of Reply provision in the FOI bill. He really doesn’t understand the importance of media and how it works.
Stung by accusations that he purposely killed the FOI bill, Rep. Ben Evardone, chair of the House Committee on Public Information, said he will force a vote on Nov. 27. They will vote on four questions:
1. Do you want the inclusion of the Right of Reply in the FOI bill?
2. Do you want to exclude national security matters in the FOI bill?
3. Do you want the inclusion of private companies in the FOI?
4. What safeguards do you want to prevent possible abuses of the rights under FOI law?
The questions look like final nails in the coffin.
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RELATED STORY:

Palace deserves bad press — Casiño

By Christine Herrera
Manila Standard Today

Hopeful. Jobseekers queue up at an employment center amid a sharp increase in the jobless rate as revealed by a Social Weather Stations survey. DANNY PATA
President Aquino has been getting “bad press” because “no good news” was happening in its governance amid joblessness soaring to 29.4 percent or equivalent to 11.7 percent of Filipinos in August,  Makabayan senatorial candidate Teddy Casiño said on Friday.
Casiño dared the President  to “face the reality that the country’s situation is really bad”, taking up results of the Social Weather Stations survey last May.
He said the government was “sugarcoating” the figures by coming out with official figure at only 7 percent of 2.8 million jobless Filipinos.
“Now how can the media report this as something good?” asked Casiño, as he took a dig at Mr. Aquino’s pronouncement on Thursday at a gathering of the Kapisanan ng mga Brodkaster sa Pilipinas, where he chided media as being allergic to good news.
“The problem of increasing joblessness is very real and it cannot be ignored or just given a media spin or else how can it be properly addressed,” he said.
Citing SWS survey, the 29.4 percent was a rise from the 26.6 percent who said they were jobless in a May survey, but lower than March’s 34.4 percent, Casiño said.
He expressed alarm over the Palace’s reproaching of the media as no no different than during martial law years when free press was suppressed and information was  controlled to come out only with good news.
“In this context, it is perfectly clear why the Aquino administration is against the Freedom of Information bill,” Casiño said.

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