These guidelines and precautions were issued by the National Union Journalists of the Philippines for media practitioners. Save the phone numbers below in your mobile phones as they can come in handy, just in case.
  1) Demand a warrant of arrest. The warrant should be signed by a judge and it  should specify the premises or items to be searched. Make sure that your name  is in the warrant.
 
  2) Object to handcuffs and other means to immobilize you. Read more

Filed under by Yolly Sotelo Fuertes.
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February 27, 2006

Media Repression

This came from Diosa Labiste, a colleage both in the Inquirer and the Women's Feature Service. When will Pangasinan media organizations come up with their own statements against media repression?
We, participants to the First Visayas Media Summit, strongly denounce the police raid on the Daily Tribune on February 25, 2006 and the confiscation of copies of the newspaper.We demand that the Arroyo government end all other acts and threats to curtain the exercise of press freedom and the people’s right to know.

Ironically, it happened on the daybreak marking the very historic event –EDSA I – when we haven toppled a dictator and ended his long years of repressive rule.

Nobody, not even President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, has the right to stifle the basic rights to freedom of _expression and access to information, especially not in these trying times.

We remind here of the provisions of the Philippine Constitution and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights that categorically guarantee the freedom of speech, of _expression and of the press.

"Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and _expression, this includes the freedom to hold opinions without interference, and to seek receive and impart information and ideas through any media, regardless of frontiers." – Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

"No law shall be passed abridging the freedom of speech, of _expression, of the press, or the right to the people peaceably to assemble and petition the government for redress of grievances." – Philippine Constitution, Bill of Rights, Sec. 4, Article III.

We call on our colleagues and all who cherish freedom and democracy to oppose all moves by this administration and any other government agencies to curtain the rights and liberties we have struggled so hard for."

Filed under by Yolly Sotelo Fuertes.
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February 26, 2006

She's closing papers, can she close blogs?

It's martial law, isn't it?

The day the country went under a state of emergency, I was down with a head-splitting migraine.
Can you beat that? Everyone was up and about trying to make heads and tails of GMA's announcement and there was I — in bed! Yeah, I could hardly move — my eyes were blurry and painful. Could be something I ate. Or something I was stressed about. Whatever. But painful eyes and all, I was reading the series of articles dished out by the Philippine Daily Inquirer about those four historic days 20 years ago when Filipinos stood proud in the eyes of the whole world by going to EDSA. Read more

Filed under by Yolly Sotelo Fuertes.
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