Text & Photos | Thousands gather around ABS-CBN compound for franchise renewal, press freedom
Never, perhaps, since the first EDSA People Power uprising, have we seen a mainstream media network actively involve itself in political protest, even amid Duterte’s intensifying attacks on media.
It was the sixth Friday protest action led by the National Union of Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP) to call on the Duterte regime (and its allies in the House of Representatives) to renew the franchise for operation of the country’s biggest broadcast network, ABS-CBN.
From NUJP’s relatively small Black Friday gatherings at the Boy Scout Rotunda to start the year to last Friday’s massive outpouring of employees and supporters, the campaign has taken on a whole new level. Never, perhaps, since the first EDSA People Power uprising, have we seen a large, mainstream media network (the biggest one, at that) actively involve itself in political protest, even amid Duterte’s intensifying attacks on media — from cyber attacks on news sites, to illegal arrest of community media practitioners, to outright intimidation of journalists, to the attempts to shut down the popular online news site Rappler.
Of course, the Duterte regime gave ABS-CBN no other choice. After Duterte’s Solicitor-General Jose Calida filed a quo warranto petition before the Supreme Court last week, and then followed it up with a petition for a gag order on the network, the possibility of an actual shut down — something many, including pundits, legislators, and network insiders, deemed unthinkable — looms.
What has been apparent to many journalists and activists that network higher-ups seem to only realize now is that this regime will go to any lengths to get what it wants. And it wants ABS-CBN. Duterte himself has publicly goaded the Lopez family to sell the network to save its franchise. He obviously has an agenda, not only to muzzle an increasingly critical press, but to transfer media control over to the Dennis Uys of his world.
But, if Friday’s protest is any indication, it is that Duterte is in for a fight. Evidently, this fight is beyond ABS-CBN. It is about a regime that wants to consolidate further its grip on power by attempting to control the press and wield its fascist might, all the while keeping his patrons (foreign or domestic) happy.
And the people, Kapamilya or not, will have none of that. / 22 February 2020