DAVAO, Philippines - Gunmen shot dead
an outspoken radio broadcaster in the Philippines, worsening the country’s
record as one of the most dangerous places in the world for journalists, press
and human rights groups said on Saturday.
The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists ranks the Philippines as
the third worst in its “impunity index” of countries that fail to fight
violence against the press.
The killings of numerous journalists and broadcasters in the Philippines
has been blamed on the country’s ‘culture of impunity’ where powerful people
feel free to commit abuses without being punished.
In one of the worst instances of such crimes, 32 journalists were among 58
people kidnapped and murdered allegedly by a powerful political clan in the
southern province of Maguindanao in November 2009.
At least 72 journalists had
been murdered since 1992, not counting the case of Dignos.
Joas Dignos, who commented on local issues in his weekday show, ‘Bombardier’
on DXGT radio, was shot in the head by motorcycle-riding men in Valencia City
in the southern island of Mindanao late Friday, police said.
Law enforcement officials would not comment on suspects or possible motives.
Dignos, 48, was known for his fiery comments regarding city officials, the
radio station personnel said.
The National Union of Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP) said that Dignos
had previously received death threats and had even stopped his live broadcasts,
using recorded commentary instead due to safety concerns.
In June, a grenade was hurled at the DXGT station while one of Dignos’s
commentaries was being aired.
Human Rights Watch said that as many as 24 journalists have been murdered
since President Benigno Aquino took office in 2010 despite his promise to fight
against such abuses.
Human Rights Watch deputy Asia director Phelim Kine also accused the Aquino administration of insulting victims and trying to downplay the problem, citing recent remarks by an Aquino spokesman that violence
Human Rights Watch deputy Asia director Phelim Kine also accused the Aquino administration of insulting victims and trying to downplay the problem, citing recent remarks by an Aquino spokesman that violence
against press members was
“not that serious.”
Source: Agencies
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