Lawmakers vote to shut down the Philippines’ largest TV network.
MANILA, Philippines (AP) — Philippine lawmakers voted Friday to reject the license renewal of the country’s largest TV network, shutting down a serious news provider that had been repeatedly threatened by the president over its critical coverage.
The House of Representatives committee on franchises, dominated by President Rodrigo Duterte’s political allies, voted 70-11 to reject a replacement 25-year franchise for ABS-CBN Corp. The National Telecommunications Commission had ordered the broadcaster to pack up in May after its old franchise expired. It halted broadcasting then, but the vote takes it off the air permanently.
International media watchdogs condemned the closure of ABS-CBN, which was founded in 1953, as a serious blow to press freedom.
Human Rights Watch said the lawmakers’ vote was “a grievous assault on press freedom within the country” and therefore the greatest blow to media freedom caused by any government act since then-dictator Ferdinand Marcos shut the broadcasting giant and other media outlets after declaring law in 1972.
“This move solidifies the tyranny of President Rodrigo Duterte, who accused ABS CBN of slights against him and politically targeted it for refusing to toe the government’s line and criticizing.
Reflecting the extent of unease over the network’s shutdown, both the opposition and several other key Duterte allies questioned efforts to shut it. Concerns have also been raised by a various range of groups, including top business executives, left-wing activists, and Catholic Church officials.
ABS-CBN has quite an 11,000 news and production personnel nationwide. apart from reporting on the coronavirus, which has infected quite 50,000 people and killed 1,314 within the Philippines, it's provided food and medical care to quite 2 million people, company officials said.
The network was last shuttered under the rule of Marcos and reopened after his 1986 ouster by an army-backed “people power” revolt.
Media watchdogs accuse Duterte and his government of muzzling independent media like ABS-CBN that have reported critically on issues including his anti-drug crackdown, which has left thousands of mostly poor drug suspects dead. Duterte has accused the network of not airing his paid campaign ad and favoring a rival candidate within the 2016 election, allegations the corporate denied.
Presidential spokesman Harry Roque says Duterte took a neutral position on ABS-CBN’s franchise renewal and left it to Congress to make a decision.
But before the franchise expiration, the government’s solicitor-general, Jose Calida, asked the Supreme Court in February to revoke the franchises of ABS-CBN and a subsidiary during a separate plan to shut the corporate for allegedly abusing its franchises and violating a constitutional prohibition on foreign investment in Philippine media. ABS-CBN denied the allegations.
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