Journalists, human rights advocates, and universities are backing embattled journalist Maria Ressa and have denounced her arrest yesterday.
Ressa, who is the CEO and executive editor of Rappler, a news website that has been critical of the Duterte administration, was detained and spent the night at the聽National Bureau of Investigation’s headquarters in Manila yesterday after authorities .
She plans to , CNN Philippines reported.
Ressa was arrested in connection to a cyber libel charge from the Department of Justice (DOJ) that indicted Ressa and Rappler for an article published in May 2012.
The complaint was filed by聽businessman Wilfredo Keng. The story in question reported that Keng allegedly loaned聽vehicles to the late former Chief Justice Renato Corona, who was impeached in 2012 for undeclared wealth. Keng has denied this allegation.
International and local journalists have expressed their support for Ressa and decried her arrest on social media.
CNN anchor Christiane Amanpour called on Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte to free Ressa.
“You know a government is desperate when they arrest a journalist,” she tweeted. Amanpour also tagged UNESCO and the聽Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) in her post.
You know a government is desperate when they arrest a journalist.
President Duterte: FREE NOW.
— Christiane Amanpour (@amanpour)
The CPJ, a New York-based non-governmental organization that promotes press freedom, for its part, , with its聽Chair Kathleen Carroll calling it “an outrage.”
“She should be freed immediately and the Philippines government needs to cease its multi-pronged attack on Rappler, its talented leader, and its brave staff,” Carroll said in a statement published this morning.
The CPJ in November.
Filipino news anchor Karen Davila, meanwhile, said Ressa’s arrest was “clear harassment.”
“The government鈥檚 message, Maria Ressa today & any of you… tomorrow,” she tweeted.
CLEAR HARASSMENT. The government鈥檚 message, Maria Ressa today & any of you… tomorrow
— Karen Davila (@iamkarendavila)
Many are questioning the validity of Ressa’s arrest as the article in question was published in May 2012 and the Cybercrime Law covering such charges was only passed in September of that year.
Human Rights Watch researcher Carlos Conde called Ressa’s arrest and the other cases filed against her and Rappler “politically motivated.”
“The cases against Ressa and Rappler appear designed not only to intimidate the website, but to eventually shut it down,” Conde published today.
Apart from the cyber libel case, Rappler’s license was also revoked in January last year. Ressa and Rappler also face a number of tax cases.
One of the Philippines’ top educational institutions, the Ateneo de Manila University backed Ressa and praised her for consistently holding the line against the erosion of people’s rights and liberties.
“As a university, we are committed to using our resources as educators to make the truth come to light. As citizens, it is our obligation to defend the truth,” University President Fr. Jose Ramon T. Villarin, SJ .
University President Fr.Jose Ramon T. Villarin, SJ has released a statement in the wake of Rapper CEO Maria Ressa's arrest.
— Ateneo de Manila University (@ateneodemanilau)
De La Salle Philippines also called on its community to support Ressa.
“Let鈥檚 give our all out support as Lasallians to Rappler. Let鈥檚 defend press freedom. Let鈥檚 make our voices heard. Let鈥檚 vote with our feet and stand with Maria Ressa,” Br. Armin Luistro FSC, a Lasallian religious brother and former Department of Education secretary .
Let鈥檚 give our all out support as Lasallians to Rappler. Let鈥檚 defend press freedom. Let鈥檚 make our voices heard. Let鈥檚 vote with our feet and stand with Maria Ressa! 鈥 Br. Armin Luistro FSC
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— DeLaSalle.ph (@OneLaSalle)
