The Ethical Journalism Network - Untold Stories - Philippines

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Philippines: How media corruption

nourishes old systems of bias and


control
By Melinda Quintos de Jesus

The Philippines has always had a complicated relationship with its


press, going back to the country’s national struggle for liberation from
the colonial regime of Spain, when the media seeded the armed
revolution with ideals drawn from Europe.

With the proclamation of the Philippine Republic in 1898, the


Philippines became the first Asian country to win its freedom from a
foreign power. The country was taken over by the United States at the
end of the Spanish-American War leading to the establishment of the
Philippine Commonwealth. By the time the country claimed full
sovereignty in 1946 the press had assumed a strong role, independent
and influential.

Filipinos enshrined the protection of press freedom in their written


constitutions (1899, 1935). The present Constitution, ratified in 1987
prohibits laws that will abridge “the freedom of speech, of expression,
or of the press.” Privatisation of the broadcast industry has set it apart.
Even with media owners holding political and business interests, the
country still boasts of having the “freest” press in Asia.

Ferdinand Marcos declared Martial Law and ruled the country as a


dictator, disrupting media development. But even during the period, an
underground press flourished and later came out in protest against the
regime. Galvanised by the assassination of opposition leader, Benigno
Aquino Jr., a clutch of small publications fused the separate streams of
dissident ideas into a national conversation, connecting the different
communities to form the People Power uprising in 1986. The press
was among the first institutions to operate in the new environment.

“Manila – 7th day: Trip to Tagaytay” by Roberto Verzo (https:// ic.kr/p/8q8tkJ) is licensed
under CC BY 2.0

The free press operates with the freedom it held during the pre-
Marcos era. Private media companies operate for profit. Four national
newspapers (Philippine Daily Inquirer, The Philippine Star, Manila
Bulletin and Business World) enjoy wide circulation. Radio and
television focus heavily on entertainment, but news and political talk
shows feature prominently. Broadcast news personalities enjoy huge
popular following. Internet and digital platforms for political information
and commentary abound.

In this free market, the government may not be the strongest actor in
terms of shaping the news agenda. But highly partisan politics make
government officials key sources of news. Traditional news
conventions and commercial profit control what gets into the news,
setting aside the role of the press to inform the public what they need
to know as citizens.

And yet, journalism continues to yield some quality, retaining the


power to expose corruption. Reports contributed to the firing of
corrupt officials, forced government agencies to investigate cases,
and even brought about the impeachment of a President (2000) and a
Chief Justice of the Supreme Court (2011).

This mixed performance of the press reflects weaknesses and


strengths of the larger society as well as its contradictory trends.
Political corruption persists, embedded in both the culture and context
of business and government. It is not surprising that journalists are
also enlisted to serve corrupt ends. Although no licensing system
limits the print media, there are laws that restrict reporting of terrorism
and rape.

The law still requires radio and television stations to secure a


congressional franchise, which could imply a conflict-of-interest
transaction. The commissioners of the National Telecommunications
Commission are political appointees. The office is not seen as
exercising power to supervise the industry, with the level of
independence of the US Federal Communications Commission or
Ofcom in the UK.
Self-regulatory systems

During the Marcos period, military censorship gave way to voluntary


regulatory mechanisms to observe government guidelines for the
press. However, a licensing system effectively limited media ownership
to the ruling family and Marcos cronies.

There are two print associations. Philippine Press Institute (PPI), a


national association of newspaper/publication owners, closed itself
down during the Martial Law period to avoid being co-opted by
government but reorganised when the regime fell. The Publishers
Association of the Philippines (PAPI) was formed to take PPI’s place
during the Marcos period. Some news organisations are members of
both.

After 1986, the Kapisanan ng mga Brodkaster ng Pilipinas (KBP), the


national association of broadcasters, continued the system of self-
regulation, setting guidelines on its own. Unfortunately, media owners
still hold vested interests which may interfere with coverage of these
issues.

These press groups set up codes, guidelines and mechanisms to


receive complaints: the Press Council for PPI, and the Standards
Authority Board for the KBP. But neither has served adequately to
address public grievance; they have only a cosmetic effect. Even
journalists working on the Press Council have become disenchanted
with the process. On its part, the KBP’s sanctions are perceived as
weak and meaningless.

One example is case in August 2010, when a disgruntled police officer


took a bus hostage with 25 tourists onboard from Hong Kong and
Filipino tour staff, declaring them captives in an open site at the
Manila’s Quirino Grandstand. He made his demands through the media
and held siege for 11 hours, at the end of which eight hostages and the
hostage taker were dead. The crisis strained diplomatic relations, with
the officials and communities in Hong Kong demanding reparations for
the victims and dismissing the formal apologies of the Philippine
government.

Government investigations showed how live media coverage


contributed seriously to the tension and the resulting tragedy and
recommended that charges be filed against the media. The charges
were abandoned after media companies marshaled prominent lawyers
in their defence. After conducting its own review, the KBP sanctions on
erring members were so light as to raise questions about their
willingness to genuinely sanction their own.

The business model as conflict of interest

There are presently 1,018 news organisations — print, radio and


television — operating in different areas in the country. Journalism
operates on different levels, but with exception of church and NGO
media, most media operate as commercial enterprises, including news
programmes as profit centers.

The commercialisation of the news forces journalists to work for


ratings and circulation. This involves a fundamental conflict of interest
and clash between profit and the objectives of news as a public
service.

Newspapers now run multiple sections, with a large proportion of


pages given over to topics such as lifestyle, entertainment, fashion,
food and sports, youth and travel. As advertisers and media buyers
demand more prime space, newspapers have yielded by creating more
of these “soft sections”, thus adding to the number of “front” pages
(the first page of each section) and with layouts dominated by ads.
News from a traditional journalism agenda is in short supply and there
is a fraction of space given over to foreign coverage.

Conflict of interest and employment issues

Journalists and news staff often find themselves caught in a bind


where unequal pay and employment conditions lead to unacceptable
compromising of ethical standards. While large media companies
provide mostly fair working conditions, salary differentials indicate
such a huge variance between the pay of star hosts and anchors,
producers, reporters and researchers. Greater importance is given to
the show-business side of journalism.

At the same time most news organisations in the provinces are small
commercial operations producing news weeklies or community based-
radio/TV stations who would operate at a loss if they hired and paid for
trained editorial staff or broadcasters. In the regions basic corporate
obligations, such as insurance and other benefits to employees are
ignored. It is a hard life, but this fact has not deterred the numbers of
young people and others who wish to work as reporters.

Provincial weeklies are assured some form of income through the


printing of judicial announcements issued by the government, decreed
during the period of Martial Law as a way to gain support of the
provincial press. These judicial notices or any other official
announcements are not always distributed fairly, however, and may
often be made in exchange for favorable coverage of those
concerned.

PPI executive director Ariel


Sebellino says local government
units can influence media
coverage with government
advertising in the provinces
through “mostly judicial notices.”
He adds: “there are government
ads that intend ‘to bring them
closer’ to local media or “Oscar Sañez” by Mark Hillary (https://
newspapers. And this is self- ic.kr/p/5Yxoix) is licensed under CC BY 2.0
serving knowing that they want
tamer coverage on them. Short of saying, (it is) PR (public relations).”

The quality of community press varies widely. There are dedicated


journalists reporting on corruption in local governments, police or
business operations, and they are often endangered for doing so.

When small media owners do not pay regular compensation or


benefits, reporters themselves are asked to solicit advertisements
from local merchants or government and are given commissions or
shares of earnings from these ads. These practices give rise to
conflict of interest issues and violate ethical standards. Sebellino said:
“Marketing people getting commission for paid advertisements is a
standard. But there lies the problem when a self-proclaimed journalist
or reporter also acts a ‘solicitor’ or marketer.”

The shadow of paid-for journalism

During the 1970s, a call for journalism in aid of development provoked


heated discussions. Its legitimate progressive aspects were co-opted
by governments wanting to control the press. The practice saw the
wholesale and institutional re-purposing of journalism as a vehicle for
state propaganda.

This also encouraged and institutionalised the practice of cash


incentives or gifts given to journalists to secure favorable coverage.
The conflict of interest is obvious: a journalist who takes bribes is
reporting for his personal gain. A reporter then can slant the story to
favour a subject who has paid or promised payment and shares the
reward with other editors.

The practice cannot be excused because of low salaries: even those


who are well paid succumb to bribery. The overall lack of transparency
is sinister. During the Marcos years the press openly favoured the
regime. Given today’s supposedly free press system and the claim for
press autonomy, “paid-for news” and political bias can be passed off
and appear as legitimate stories.

There is now a rich taxonomy of media bribery and those described


below are among the more colorful:

AC-DC (Attack-Collect-Defend-Collect): A kind of journalism


where the reporter attacks a person in order to collect money
from that person’s rival or enemy. The same journalist then
defends the person originally attacked, also for a fee.
ATM journalism: Refers to a practice in which reporters receive
discreet and regular payoffs through their ATM accounts. News
sources simply deposit cash into these accounts instead of
handing the money over to journalists through envelopes.
Blood money: A payoff before publication to ensure that a story or
a critical article is killed, or else slanted to favor whoever is
paying.
Envelopmental journalism: A take on “developmental journalism,”
a concept which became popular during the martial law period,
when the Marcos regime appropriated the term to discourage
criticism. The generic term refers to various forms of corruption.
Intelligentsia: A play on “intelligence” as used by police and other
security forces; this is the share of journalists on the police beat
of bribe or protection money given to police.

The advertorial

The line between editorial and advertising content blurs easily on the
pages of newspapers, where the content of reports may sometimes
legitimately provide consumer information about new products in the
market. However, the most blatant demonstration of a conflict of
interest occurs when the advertising contract includes non-
advertising content. The “advertorial” is presented as a report, but it is
nothing but re-packaged advertising material, produced by ad
companies.

The advertorial has also made its way into the community-based press
as described by Sebellino: “Advertisers now want their traditional
advertisements to be accompanied by articles and some of these are
disguised as news. So that newspapers package these as marketing
strategy to augment revenues.”

Broadcasting organisations have depended on the practice of


“blocktimers” as a revenue stream. The KBP Broadcast Code defines
the term as when “natural or juridical persons… [buy] or contracts for
or is given broadcast air time.”
It applies to entertainment as well as public affairs broadcasts. The
radio or television station, sells the time segment (programmes can
run from one-hour or more) to a “blocktimer” who can then produce a
programme independently. The station does not pay for expenses. It
assures the station owner revenue for the media segment, without any
marketing effort.

The blocktiming company, group or individual is free to get advertisers


or not. The practice is used for political campaigns or for other forms
of advocacy and it is open to any association, charities, public service
NGOs, church or religious group, a government agency, political party
or politician.

KBP’s power is limited to member stations. It is unable to monitor all


the blocktime programmes. Media companies which are not KBP
members operate with little accountability for its operations. In general
the practice of blocktiming is practically unregulated.

KBP executive director Rey Hulog said the association is updating its
list of blocktimers. In 2007 to 2010, KBP local chapters reported
around 354 blocktimers — “at least one station with a blocktimer on
the air in every major city or municipality.” The Center for Media
Freedom and Responsibility (CMFR) notes that these were election
years, but even so, the practice is common, with or without elections.
It is increasingly seen as standard practice for the broadcast industry.

Full disclosure helps mitigate the conflict of interest. The public should
know the real identities of those involved in the blocktime
transactions, the source of the information and who benefits from this
exposure. When a well-known professional broadcaster agrees to host
a programme on behalf of an unidentified blocktimer, he or she may
lend credibility to a propaganda campaign. Such programmes are
launched in advance of an election, presenting a broadcaster as an
independent commentator on false pretext.

The KBP and PPI issued a review of blocktiming and other forms of
corruption (In Honor of the News: Media Reexamination of the News in
a Democracy). But the practice continues and is virtually
unsupervised.

Transactions for election coverage

A publication of the PCIJ, News for Sale (2004), documents the


wholesale transaction between political candidates and media
broadcast networks to assure coverage of political candidates,
arrangements apart from the placement of political ads. These commit
airtime through interviews and appearances in shows and
programmes of network affiliates all over the country.

“Given the power that television wields, media strategists in 2004


exerted greater effort to capture the TV audience through advertising,
aggressive public relations with broadcasters, and all sorts of means—
legitimate and otherwise—to sway television coverage in their favor.”

With electoral laws limiting the candidate’s spending on television


advertising, such airtime expands the exposure for political
candidates. The practice diminishes the role of independent journalists
in determining the kind of political information the public receives
during a campaign. Media marketing has taken over the function.

The Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism reported: “In the


2004 elections, as in the 1998 presidential and 2001 senatorial races,
radio networks struck million-peso deals with campaign managers that
allowed candidates and parties to circumvent legal limits on
advertising and media exposure. These deals involved ‘commercial
packages’ offered to candidates and included a guaranteed number of
commercials, press releases, daily interviews, and rally coverage aired
on the networks.”

Journalist sources told CMFR that such arrangements were still very
much in operation during the 2010 and 2013 elections.

Some journalists are retained by political groups to produce campaign


reports, without taking leave of their jobs. Political campaigns also
take care of the needs of assigned reporters, including meals and
other expenses.

Another issue is product endorsement by news personalities which


has been prohibited by one major television network, ABS-CBN 2. But
it is allowed in a rival company, GMA-7. It is not always clear whether
this system provides them with extra compensation from the
advertising revenue. The practice has not been questioned by the
KBP.

Lack of transparency: Online news and commercials

Exchange deals, merchandise and other business services, are not all
reported and the audience can be oblivious to the advertising content
in these so-called news features. Exchange deals are used for
employees as well as for guest entertainers or commentators who are
not paid anything for their time.

These practices have also found their way online. Puff pieces on
companies and their services appear as regular articles but may have
been produced on the basis of an exchange.

There has been no effort to establish rules about how news services
online should clarify the division between advertising and news. The
dynamic character of web and social networking sites further blurs the
distinction between news and advertising and the lines separating the
two. Advertorial features can be found in the same space (home pages
and social media timelines) as the news and other independently-
produced editorial content.

“Likes”, “retweets”, “hits” and “visits” are the Internet’s currency.


People who can provide these are paid for the service. In an
environment where disinformation and misinformation abound,
“influencers” can dictate agenda and content, and act as a media
“point man” and/or “shepherds”.

The search for solutions

The range of challenges and opportunities for corruption and bad


practice compels the media to improve enforcement of self-regulation
at industry level. However, a mix of self-interest and scant means for
internal monitoring suggest that media owners are wary of exerting
their power either because they do not care or are unable to enforce
discipline.
“Useless” by Keith Bacongco (https:// ic.kr/p/4uT69b) is licensed under CC BY 2.0

PPI and KBP know that the Press Council and the Standards Authority
are passive mechanisms, activated only by public complaints.
According to Sebellino and Hulog, the two associations are working on
a more “efficient” way of monitoring these common practices.

Although the general public is the most important stakeholder in the


fight against conflicts of interest in the press, people are often passive
consumers of news. In general, the public remains uninformed about
how easily and extensively the news can be manipulated. Only a small
segment of the audience would be able to detect a media spin, and
even fewer would know enough about an issue to check inaccuracies
in a report. Even if they are aware, they do not bother to complain or
express their criticism.

Press ombudsman?

The creation of a national independent Press Ombudsman has never


really been discussed. Ideally, this should be a mix of funding that
includes contributions from the media industry as well as a
government subsidy. The latter however is usually regarded as a
barrier to autonomy and independence.

Yet the country’s experience with independent agencies, such as the


Constitutional commissions (the Ombudsman, Civil Service
Commission and the Commission on Audit) could help assess the
acceptance of such an agency.

Media literacy training for the public

The lack of understanding about how journalism operates and the


dangers of misinformation suggest that people must learn to
understand the media and the role of the press. They must appreciate
why the press is protected. But there must also be appreciation for the
need for media accountability.

Media literacy training can be undertaken in schools. More important,


there should be training for citizens, including public officials but
particularly for the public, so an audience is empowered to evaluate
and criticise media practice when necessary.

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