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VERA Files, Reporters Without Borders Germany partner to monitor media ownership in PH

Lisa-Maria Kretschmer, head of Research & Project Coordinator of  Reporters Without Borders Germany Media Ownership Monitor, explains the project they are undertaking with VERA Files in the Philippines. Beside her is  LUZ Rimban, VERA Files trustee.
Lisa-Maria Kretschmer, head of Research & Project Coordinator of Reporters Without Borders Germany Media Ownership Monitor, explains the project they are undertaking with VERA Files in the Philippines. Beside her is LUZ Rimban, VERA Files trustee.

By YVETTE MORALES

VERA Files has partnered with Reporters ohne Grenzen, German section of Reporters sans frontières (Reporters without Borders, RSF) to embark on a three-month study of media ownership in the Philippines.

The Media Ownership Monitor (MOM) Philippines is part of RSF’s global project to study the extent of the concentration of media ownership, a prerequisite for securing freedom of the press and defending the diversity of opinions.

Vergel Santos, Chairman of the Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility, who was one of the participants in the roundtable discussion held last week to kick-off the project, called the MOM a “terrific,” much-needed initiative that will open people’s eyes to the power behind the media organizations.

Vergel Santos of  Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility with Crispin Maslog of UP, Los Banos.
Vergel Santos of Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility with Crispin Maslog of UP, Los Banos.

“Whatever you say, the owners impose their will on the media organization,” Santos said. He added that the study will provide the public with a glimpse of how media owners’ interests become part of the news agenda, and what kind of gatekeeping happens inside newsrooms.

The project, which employs a generic methodology for all countries, will look at ownership and media concentration of the most relevant newspapers, tabloids, online news sites, television and radio stations based on audience share.

“If your figures are really high, that means you’re widely circulated, that means you have more readers and that means and it can […] translate into, let’s say, good business. Meaning, a lot of advertisers would want to publish their ads on the paper,” said Ariel Sebellino, Executive Director of the Philippine Press Institute, who was also one of the participants in the roundtable discussion.

From left to right: Rachel Khan, chair of the Journalism Department, UP;Ariel Sebellino, PPI executive director; and Ramon Tuazon of the Asian Institute of Journalism and Communication.
From left to right: Rachel Khan, chair of the Journalism Department, UP;Ariel Sebellino, PPI executive director; and Ramon Tuazon of the Asian Institute of Journalism and Communication.

A website will be put up to contain the result of the study which will be presented to the public in November in a press conference to be followed by an academic workshop on media pluralism.

RSF started MOM in Colombia and Cambodia in 2015. This year, aside from the Philippines, RSF is also undertaking MOM in Tunisia, Turkey, Mongolia, Peru, and Ukraine.

Reporters Without Borders Germany has existed for 21 years and is part of the international, Paris-based organization Reporters sans frontières, whose aim is to defend human rights, in particular freedom of the press and the right to inform and be informed anywhere in the world.

VERA Files is nonprofit media organization composed of veteran journalists committed to advance excellence in journalism by engaging in research-intensive, high-impact reports in multiple formats and providing training, particularly mentoring of journalists.

Lisa-Maria Kretschmer and Ellen Tordesillas, VERA Files trustee.
Lisa-Maria Kretschmer and Ellen Tordesillas, VERA Files trustee.
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3 Comments

  1. I’l give you guys a headstart. Nah, I’m sure MOM is already aware of it.

    An Indonesian tycoon everyone is familiar with is now the biggest media mogul in the Philippines. Anthoni Salim, via Manny Pangilinan and Ray Espinosa, practically trashed the constitutional limit on media ownership expressly reserved exclusively to Filipinos.

    By circumventing this prohibition, Salim indirectly owns Business World, and recently, also Philippine Star and a huge chunk of Inquirer, too. He did it with the help of the 2 genius boys, and aided by Albert Del Rosario, before his stint in Aquino’s cabinet.

    Salim also owns TV5, a few cable channels, some UHF stations, AM and FM radio stations, the biggest satellite cable network (Cignal) and a few internet channels. This is of course, aside from controlling the bigger of the two criminal syndicates running the telecoms/internet duopoly, its power distribution monopoly in the metropolis – Meralco, not to mention other essential utilities we’ve practically handed him control over our lives on a silver platter.

    Roberto Ongpin, a Filipino, is suffering after he was named a “Bad” Oligarch. Compared to Salim and his modern Makapilis, Ongpin is an angel.

  2. # LCsiao and Tongue. Thanks. We have it.

    Very informative.

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