SEAPA hails Thai court ruling on death of Italian photojourn

THE SOUTHEAST ASIAN PRESS ALLIANCE (SEAPA) on Monday welcomed the precedent-setting inquest ruling of a Bangkok Criminal Court finding Thai security forces responsible for the death of Italian photojournalist Fabio Polenghi, during a crackdown by state forces on red-shirt protesters in Bangkok on 19 May 2010.

The court ruling issued on May 29, Friday, is an important step “in addressing the impunity by the state on violence against media workers, and not only in Thailand,” SEAPA said in a press statement.

A regional network of independent media organizations, SEAPA said the ruling came after over three years of tumultuous investigations through the administrations of two prime ministers, Abhisit Vejajiva and Yingluck Shinawatra. The ruling in effect certified the result of inquiries by the police and the Department of Special Investigation, SEAPA said.

“The credibility of the process was constantly challenged not only by the continuing high tensions in politics, but also the institutional difficulties associated with obtaining cooperation from the armed forces and other authorities in accessing evidence to uncover the truth,” SEAPA said.

Although the court failed to pinpoint the army personnel responsible for firing the bullet that killed Polenghi, SEAPA said “it identified the only military unit located in the area at the time was the Second Cavalry Division, King’s Guard.”

“The inquest finding represents a rare landmark in the judicial process, thanks to relentless efforts of Polenghi’s family and persistent pressure from the international media community,” it added.

SEAPA said it hopes “that this judicial process can be sustained with a momentum than can bring those responsible to Polenghi’s death to justice, through a fair process that should also be applied to other pending cases, including Japanese photographer Hiroyuki Muramoto and those which do not involve members of the media.”

Polenghi and Muramoto were among some 90 people killed during the protracted military-police operation to end the political protests. Several others including local and foreign journalists were also wounded in the various violent incidents between April and May 2010.

Nonetheless, SEAPA said it is aware of “the continuing threats to achieving justice for victims of violence, including the proposed amnesty bills currently being discussed by both government and opposition parties.”

“At the very least, any form of political amnesty should not be pursued at the expense of uncovering the truth and determining culpability for crimes,”it stressed.

SEAPA has since 2011 highlighted the cases of Polenghi and Muramoto as among the priority examples of cases of impunity in the killing of journalists in the region that deserve urgent redress by the states concerned.

“Impunity,” SEAPA said, “is a chronic failure by states, judiciary and law enforcement agencies to bring perpetrators to justice. It amplifies the damage to the deaths involved since it encourages more killing when perpetrators are not held accountable for their crimes.”

In the past five years violence against media workers in Southeast Asia has worsened, following a global trend, “largely due to the failure by governments in the region to uphold the rule of law.”

The PCIJ is a founding member of SEAPA, together with the Thai Journalists Association (TJA), Alliance of Independent Journalists of Indonesia (AJI), Institute for the Study of Free Flow of Information (ISAI) of Indonesia, and the Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility (CMFR) of the Philippines.

The Center for Independent Journalism (CIJ) of Malaysia is also a SEAPA member, while independent media groups in Myanmar, Timor-Leste, Cambodia, and Vietnam are SEAPA partners.

PCIJ a finalist in Data Journalism Awards: Cast your vote now!

FOR the second year in a row, the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism (PCIJ) has been selected as one of 72 finalists from 19 countries in the 2013 Data Journalism Awards (DJA) by The Global Editors Network (GEN).

The PCIJ’s four-part report titled “The Wealth of the ‘Gods of Faura’” was chosen out of over 300 applications that the GEN received during the screening process.

In the 2012 DJA, the PCIJ’s story, “Opaque LGUs the norm in NCR”, was also one of the 59 finalists.

For the 2013 DJA, the PCIJ was named a finalist for a story that inquired into the steadily rising wealth of the 14 justices of the Philippine Supreme Court and exposed how the majority had not disclosed sundry fat allowances that they have been receiving, on top of their salaries, in their statements of assets, liabilities, and net worth.

PCIJ executive director Malou Mangahas and PCIJ research director Karol Ilagan wrote the story that was also a joint research project of the PCIJ and Solar News Network.

The PCIJ is the only finalist from Asia in the data-driven investigative reporting small media category of the 2013 DJA.

The 10 other finalists in the category include three from the United States, two from Italy, and one each from Canada, the United Kingdom, New Zealand, Northern Ireland, and Hungary.

There are four DJA awards categories — data-driven investigative reporting, data-driven applications, storytelling with data, and data journalism website or section.

VOTE FOR PEOPLE’S CHOICE!

This year, the DJA has also opened a special category, the “People’s Choice Award”, and encouraged netizens the world over to vote for their favorite data application or visualization nominees.

People may browse the list of nominees by category and vote for their favorite choices here.

Projects from small media organization/individuals and large media organizations are judged separately in the DJA. A total of 15,000 euros (around $19,000) will be awarded to eight winning projects.

The winners of the DJA 2013 will be announced during the GEN News Summit in Paris, France, on June 20, 2013. All the finalists have been invited to attend the ceremony.

The 72 nominees will be judged by an international jury of experts chaired by Paul Steiger, editor-in-chief, president, and CEO of ProPublica, the non-profit investigative newsroom based in New York. Before Pro Publica, Steiger was the managing editor of the Wall Street Journal from 1991 to May 2007.

GEN or The Global Editors Network is a nonprofit, non-governmental association “committed to the principles of innovation and information sharing in the newsroom.”

GEN “empowers editors-in-chief, senior news executives, and media professionals from all platforms — print, digital, mobile and broadcast — by optimizing GEN’s network base to create new ideas and journalistic tools, allowing quality journalism to thrive.”

More than 900 editors-in-chief have joined GEN and “made the decision to dedicate themselves to a better future for journalism.”

GEN’s 24 board members consist of “top media decisionmakers from news organizations such as CNN, Zeit Online, Les Echos, BBC, Le Monde, Clarin, the Guardian, the New York Times, etc.”

Aside from Pro Publica’s Steiger, the other members of the DJA 2013 jury are Justin Arenstein, publisher and CEO of African Eye News Service (AENS) and HomeGrown Magazines in Nelspruit, South Africa; Peter Barron, Google’s Director for External Relations for Europe, the Middle East and Africa;

Wolfgang Blau, director of Digital Strategy at The Guardian and former editor-in-chief of Zeit Online, the sister publication of Germany’s newspaper Die Zeit; Liliana Bounegru, editor of DataDrivenJournalism.net and project manager on data journalism at the European Journalism Centre; Reginald Chua, editor of Data and Innovation at Thomson Reuters;

Frédéric Filloux, a freelance writer and regular contributor to Slate.fr who teaches Multimedia Journalism at the Sciences Po School of Journalism in Paris; Joshua Hatch, senior editor for Data and Interactives at The Chronicle of Higher Education; Aron Pilhofer, editor of ‘Interactive News’ at the New York Times;

Paul Radu, executive director of the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project and Co-creator of the Investigative Dashboard Concept; Simon Rogers, editor of the Guardian’s DataBlog; and Giannina Segnini, director of the Investigative Unit at the daily, La Nacion, in Costa Rica.

THE FINALISTS:

Check out the press release from the Perugia International Journalism Festival for the full list of the DJA 2013 finalists.

Philippines No. 3 worst case of impunity vs media — CPJ

TOMORROW, MAY 3, is World Press Freedom Day.

Yet instead of joyful celebration, solemn tribute through action on the cases of journalists who had been killed, and whose killers remain at large, should mark the day, according to the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ).

The CPJ launched today, May 2, its 2013 Impunity Index (“Getting Away With Murder”), which details the cases of “unpunished violence against the press” as a percentage of each country’s population.

The Impunity Index, published annually, “identifies countries where journalists are murdered regularly and governments fail to solve the crimes.”

The latest index covers murders that occurred from January 1, 2003, through December 31, 2012, and remain unsolved. Only nations with five or more unsolved cases are listed. The Index’s methodology considers cases unsolved “when no convictions have been won.”

Twelve countries that are the deadliest places in the world for journalists made it to the 2013 Impunity Index.

The Philippines landed in third slot after Iraq and Somalia.

Highlights of the CPJ’s 2013 Impunity Index follow:

1. IRAQ: “Iraq has the world’s worst record on impunity. No convictions have been obtained in 93 journalist slayings in the past decade. The vast majority of the victims, 95 percent, were local journalists. They include freelance cameraman Tahrir Kadhim Jawad, who was killed on assignment outside Baghdad in 2010 when a bomb attached to his car exploded. Jawad was a ‘courageous cameraman’ known for getting footage ‘where others had failed,’ Mohammad al-Jamili, Baghdad bureau chief for the U.S. government-funded outlet Al-Hurra, said at the time. Police opened an investigation but made no arrests.”

Impunity Index Rating: 2.818 unsolved journalist murders per million inhabitants last year: Ranked 1st with a rating of 2.906

2. SOMALIA: “In a country with a long history of media killings, 2012 was the deadliest year on record for the press. Twelve journalists were murdered in reprisal for their work in 2012 despite relative calm in the capital, Mogadishu. Given the ouster of Al-Shabaab insurgents from Mogadishu in 2011, the killings raised concern that reporters were being targeted by a widening field of politically motivated antagonists. Journalists with the aggressive Shabelle Media Network paid a high price: Four were slain in 2012 and three in the preceding years. The 2012 victims included Hassan Osman Abdi, known by the nickname ‘Fantastic,’ the network’s director and the producer of news programs. Nationwide, 23 journalist murders over the past decade have gone unsolved.”

Impunity Index Rating: 2.396 unsolved journalist murders per million inhabitants last year: Ranked 2nd with a rating of 1.183

3. PHILIPPINES: “Despite President Benigno Aquino III’s vow to reverse impunity in journalist murders, the Philippines ranked third worst worldwide for the fourth consecutive year. Fifty-five journalist murders have gone unsolved in the past decade. The 2011 Ortega murder reflects the politically inspired nature of the large majority of Philippine killings, along with the general breakdown in the rule of law that has allowed the killings to continue. Ortega, a radio talk show host who exposed corruption, was shot in the back of the head while shopping in a Puerto Princesa City clothing store. Police soon made arrests and traced the murder weapon to a provincial governor’s aide. But the case suffered a severe blow in 2013 when an alleged conspirator who had turned state witness was killed in prison.”

Impunity Index Rating: 0.580 unsolved journalist murders per million inhabitants last year: Ranked 3rd with a rating of 0.589

4. SRI LANKA: “Sri Lanka’s impunity rating was unchanged from 2012. But four years after the end of the nation’s long civil war, President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s administration has shown no interest in pursuing the perpetrators in nine journalist murders over the past decade. All of the victims had reported on politically sensitive issues in ways that were critical of the Rajapaksa government. The cases include the fatal 2009 beating of prominent newspaper editor Lasantha Wickramatunga. ‘If there are really independent investigations, many murders and attacks may be traced back to highest-level government politicians and military officials,’ said Ruki Fernando, a human rights defender with the Law and Society Trust.”

Impunity Index Rating: 0.431 unsolved journalist murders per million inhabitants last year: Ranked 4th with a rating of 0.431

5. COLOMBIA: “Colombia’s rating showed little change from 2012, but the nation, once one of the world’s deadliest for the press, has made steady progress over time. No journalists have been murdered for their work in Colombia since 2010. Improvements in the overall security climate have generally outpaced judicial gains, said Carlos Cortez, one of the founders of the Colombian press freedom group Foundation for a Free Press. The government provides security directly to journalists under threat. Among the eight unsolved murders over the past decade is the 2003 shooting of Jaime Rengifo Revero, a radio host who had criticized government security efforts in the north. Two former right-wing paramilitary members face charges in the killing.”

Impunity Index Rating: 0.171 unsolved journalist murders per million inhabitants last year: Ranked 5th with a rating of 0.173

6. AFGHANISTAN: “No journalists have been murdered in Afghanistan since 2008, but authorities have shown no progress in pursuing suspects in the five unsolved cases over the past decade. The most recent victim was Abdul Samad Rohani, Helmand correspondent for the BBC’s Pashto service and a contributor to the Pajhwok Afghan News agency. Rohani, abducted and shot in 2008, had recently reported on drug trafficking and its links to government officials. The planned 2014 withdrawal of NATO troops has raised new concerns about the overall security climate and, with it, the news media’s safety.”

Impunity Index Rating: 0.142 unsolved journalist murders per million inhabitants last year: Ranked 7th with a rating of 0.145

7. MEXICO: “President Enrique Pena Nieto has inherited a 90 percent impunity rate in journalist murders. Fifteen slayings have gone unsolved over the past decade, with most of the killings attributed to criminals affiliated with the country’s powerful cartels or to corrupt police and government officials. Journalist murders have declined slightly over the past three years, but CPJ research has concluded that the drop is due in part to the self-censorship that has taken hold in virtually every corner of the nation outside the capital. In May 2012, a Nuevo Laredo newspaper officially announced that it would no longer cover anything related to criminal groups. Congress and the states federalized crimes against free expression last year in a series of promising moves designed to move cases out of corrupt local jurisdictions.”

Impunity Index Rating: 0.131 unsolved journalist murders per million inhabitants last year: Ranked 8th with a rating of 0.132

8. PAKISTAN: “Pakistan’s failure to prosecute a single suspect in the 23 journalist murders over the past decade has pushed it up two spots on the index. A new onslaught of violence came in 2012, with five murders. One of the few cases to progress from investigation to trial was derailed last year when an eyewitness to the 2011 murder of Geo TV reporter Babar was gunned down two days before he was due to testify. Pakistani news media are vibrant and unified in speaking out against impunity; in March, representatives of dozens of outlets and groups began crafting a plan to improve journalist safety as part of the U.N. effort. But any optimism is tempered by a stark reality: CPJ research shows that journalists face an astonishing array of threats, not only from militants and warlords but from military, security, and government officials.:

Impunity Index Rating: 0.130 unsolved journalist murders per million inhabitants last year: Ranked 10th with a rating of 0.109

9. RUSSIA: “With 14 unsolved murder cases since 2003, Russia is the ninth worst country on the index. Journalists in the North Caucuses have been the most vulnerable in recent years; the most recent victim is Kazbek Gekkiyev, a state television anchor working in the region, who was shot three times in December 2012 on his way home from work. Russia’s historically poor record in prosecuting journalist killers prompted human rights lawyers and the mother of a journalist missing and presumed dead to submit a case to the European Court of Human Rights arguing that Russia fosters a state pattern of impunity in murders of journalists.”

Impunity Index Rating: 0.099 unsolved journalist murders per million inhabitants last year: Ranked 9th with a rating of 0.113

10. BRAZIL: “With nine unsolved cases, Brazil’s impunity rating has soared in recent years. Despite its expressed commitments to justice, Brazil has recorded no new convictions since 2010. Four journalists were murdered in 2012, the highest annual toll the regional powerhouse has seen in a decade. Three of the four 2012 victims worked for online publications. They included website editor Mario Randolfo Marques Lopes, who had aggressively covered government corruption and police misconduct. Provincial reporters, working out of the national media limelight and in areas where law enforcement is weak or corrupt, have been especially vulnerable in Brazil.”

Impunity Index Rating: 0.046 unsolved journalist murders per million inhabitants last year: Ranked 11th with a rating of 0.026

11. NIGERIA: “A steady rise in anti-press violence in recent years has pushed Nigeria onto the index for the first time. With five unsolved murders, it has the second worst impunity rating in Africa, behind only Somalia. Those covering the activities of the extremist Muslim group Boko Haram are particularly vulnerable. In 2012, assailants shot and killed Enenche Akogwu of independent Channels TV as he reported on the aftermath of terrorist attacks in the northern city of Kano.”

Impunity Index Rating: 0.031 unsolved journalist murders per million inhabitants last year: Nigeria was not on the 2012 index

12. INDIA: “Despite its growing international profile, India has lagged in ensuring free expression and the rule of law. No convictions have been won in the cases of six journalists murdered for reporting on local corruption, crime, or politics. Time and again, CPJ research shows, the arrests made after an attack have failed to lead to prosecutions. This is the case for Rajesh Mishra, who died after assailants hit him with iron rods in March 2012. Mishra worked for a Hindi-language weekly and had written about financial irregularities at schools in Rewa. Six suspects were arrested last year but none have been convicted.”

Impunity Index Rating: 0.005 unsolved journalist murders per million inhabitants last year: Ranked 12th with a rating of 0.005

The release of 2013 index, CPJ said, “comes at a pivotal moment in the global struggle against impunity.” It cited a United Nations plan “to combat deadly anti-press violence gets under way this year, with Pakistan being an early focal point,” as well as “to strengthen journalist safety programs and assist member states in developing ways to prosecute the killers of journalists.”

In the Philippine case, the 2013 CPJ report averred that, “the insecurity of witnesses is a key problem in addressing impunity.”

“Authorities in the Philippines… have yet to make headway in the prosecution of dozens of suspects in a politically motivated massacre in Maguindanao province that claimed the lives of more than 50 people, including 32 journalists and media workers, in 2009,” the report said. “Three witnesses in the Maguindanao case have themselves been murdered, one of them dismembered and mutilated.”

“Each time a witness is killed, it affects the morale of other witnesses by showcasing how inept the government is in ensuring their safety,” says Michaella Ortega whose father, prominent radio host Gerardo Ortega, was shot dead in 2011 in Puerto Princesa, Palawan. A key witness to the murder had been killed in jail.

Among other insights, the CPJ’s 2013 Impunity Index also noted that:

– “Local journalists were the victims in the vast majority of unsolved cases on CPJ’s index. Only 11 of the 265 murder cases on the index involve journalists working outside their own country.”

– “Political reporting was the most dangerous beat. Thirty percent of the victims included on CPJ’s index covered political news. Another 20 percent reported on corruption, the second most dangerous topic.”

– “Government and military officials are considered the leading suspects in 26 percent of murder cases on the index.”

– “Responding to threats could save lives. In nearly half of the cases reviewed for the index, victims received death threats prior to their murders.”

– “In dozens of cases, the killers clearly intended to send an intimidating message to the entire press corps. In 48 percent of cases in the index, the victims were abducted or tortured before being killed.”

CPJ’s Impunity Index is compiled as part of the organization’s Global Campaign Against Impunity, which is supported by the Adessium Foundation, the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, and the Open Society Foundations.

PCIJ story on wealth of justices, Data Journalism Awards finalist

FOR the second year in a row, the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism (PCIJ) has been selected as one of 72 finalists from 19 countries in the 2013 Data Journalism Awards (DJA) by The Global Editors Network (GEN).

The PCIJ’s four-part report titled “The Wealth of the ‘Gods of Faura’” was chosen out of over 300 applications that the GEN received during the screening process. (In the 2012 DJA, the PCIJ’s story, “Opaque LGUs the norm in NCR”, was also one of the 59 finalists.)

For the 2013 DJA, the PCIJ was named a finalist for a story that inquired into the steadily rising wealth of the 14 justices of the Philippine Supreme Court and exposed how the majority had not disclosed sundry fat allowances that they have been receiving, on top of their salaries, in their statements of assets, liabilities, and net worth.

PCIJ executive director Malou Mangahas and PCIJ research director Karol Ilagan wrote the story that was also a joint research project of the PCIJ and Solar News Network.

The PCIJ is the only finalist from Asia in the data-driven investigative reporting small media category of the 2013 DJA.

The 10 other finalists in the category include three from the United States, two from Italy, and one each from Canada, the United Kingdom, New Zealand, Northern Ireland, and Hungary.

There are four DJA awards categories — data-driven investigative reporting, data-driven applications, storytelling with data, and data journalism website or section.

This year, the DJA has also opened a special category, the “People’s Choice Award”, and encouraged netizens the world over to vote for their favorite data application or visualization nominees.

People may browse the list of nominees by category and vote for their favorite choices at https://app.wizehive.com/voting/dja2013

Projects from small media organization/individuals and large media organizations are judged separately in the DJA. A total of 15,000 euros (around $19,000) will be awarded to eight winning projects.

The winners of the DJA 2013 will be announced during the GEN News Summit in Paris, France, on June 20, 2013. All the finalists have been invited to attend the ceremony.

The 72 nominees will be judged by an international jury of experts chaired by Paul Steiger, editor-in-chief, president, and CEO of ProPublica, the non-profit investigative newsroom based in New York. Before Pro Publica, Steiger was the managing editor of the Wall Street Journal from 1991 to May 2007.

GEN or The Global Editors Network is a nonprofit, non-governmental association “committed to the principles of innovation and information sharing in the newsroom.”

GEN “empowers editors-in-chief, senior news executives, and media professionals from all platforms — print, digital, mobile and broadcast — by optimizing GEN’s network base to create new ideas and journalistic tools, allowing quality journalism to thrive.” More than 900 editors-in-chief have joined GEN and “made the decision to dedicate themselves to a better future for journalism.”

GEN’s 24 board members consist of “top media decisionmakers from news organizations such as CNN, Zeit Online, Les Echos, BBC, Le Monde, Clarin, the Guardian, the New York Times, etc.”

Aside from Pro Publica’s Steiger, the other members of the DJA 2013 jury are Justin Arenstein, publisher and CEO of African Eye News Service (AENS) and HomeGrown Magazines in Nelspruit, South Africa; Peter Barron, Google’s Director for External Relations for Europe, the Middle East and Africa;

Wolfgang Blau, director of Digital Strategy at The Guardian and former editor-in-chief of Zeit Online, the sister publication of Germany’s newspaper Die Zeit; Liliana Bounegru, editor of DataDrivenJournalism.net and project manager on data journalism at the European Journalism Centre; Reginald Chua, editor of Data and Innovation at Thomson Reuters;

Frédéric Filloux, a freelance writer and regular contributor to Slate.fr who teaches Multimedia Journalism at the Sciences Po School of Journalism in Paris; Joshua Hatch, senior editor for Data and Interactives at The Chronicle of Higher Education; Aron Pilhofer, editor of ‘Interactive News’ at the New York Times;

Paul Radu, executive director of the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project and Co-creator of the Investigative Dashboard Concept; Simon Rogers, editor of the Guardian’s DataBlog; and Giannina Segnini, director of the Investigative Unit at the daily, La Nacion, in Costa Rica.

Find the press release from the Perugia International Journalism Festival with the full list of the DJA 2013 finalists.

‘SC Justices and their wealth’ showing tonight on SolarTV

PCIJ SOLAR LOGOS

SOLAR NEWS, the newest news channel in the Philippines, airs tonight (January 11) the results of a collaborative investigation between Solar News TV and the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism into the wealth of the justices of the Philippine Supreme Court.

The Justices and their Wealth is a one-hour special on the contents of the statements of assets, liabilities, and net worth (SALNs) of the SC Justices. As well, the special looks into the refusal of the high tribunal to make public the asset records of the officials of the judiciary. This, even as all other officials in the other branches of government are required to make full and public disclosures of their asset records as required by the Constitution and Republic Act 6713, or the Code of Conduct and Ethical Standards for Public Officials and Employees.

The one-hour program is based in part on several months of investigating by the PCIJ on the SALNs of the justices, their fat allowances, and their many other perks. The print and online versions of the story came out beginning December 9, 2012, with SC justices among PH’s best paid, allowances, bonuses not in SALNsCorona’s fat allowances not taxed: Same, same still at SC?Rapidly rising net worth shared bliss of SC justices; and Transparency on ice: Judicial independence or impunity?

Solar TV’s special report will be aired at 8 p.m. Manila time on channel 21 for those with free TV; channel 16 for those using SkyCable; and channel 28 for those on Global Destiny.