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Maria Ressa arrest: everything you need to know about the Rappler editor | World news


Who is Maria Ressa and what is Rappler?

Maria Ressa is one of the most highly-regarded journalists in the Philippines. She spent two decades working as an investigative reporter, foreign correspondent and both Manila and Jakarta Bureau Chief for CNN. She then headed the news division of the Philippines biggest TV news channel, ABS-CBN.

In 2012, she and three fellow female journalists came together to form Rappler, a online news platform with an ethos similar to a tech start-up, operating with a small team of 12 young reporters and developers. It was the first of its kind in the Philippines, and while initially seen as a site primarily for young readers, through the power of social media it has grown into the forth biggest news website in the Philippines with over 100 journalists. Rappler also works as a fact-checker for Facebook in the Philippines in the fight against fake news.

Ressa’s role at Rappler has won her plaudits around the world. She was among the journalists named Time Person of the Year 2018, as well as numerous other prestigious journalism awards.

What has she done to attract President Duterte’s attention?

Ressa and Duterte have been crossing paths for over thirty years. She first interviewed him in the 1980s when he was Mayor of Davao. In 2015, during his election campaign, she conducted a now infamous interview with Duterte in which he confessed to killing three people.

However, it was only after Duterte’s election in 2016, when Rappler began shining a spotlight on the pro-Duterte online “troll army” – who were pushing out fake news stories and manipulating the narrative around his presidency – that the organisation began to feel pressure from the administration. Rappler also began reporting critically on the extrajudicial killings, human rights violations and fast-rising death toll from Duterte’s brutal war on drugs, with stories demonstrating that the abuses were being carried out by the police with Duterte’s approval.

How did Duterte respond?

The first indicator that Rappler was about to be targeted was during Duterte’s State of the Union speech in July 2017, when, to Ressa’s surprise, he declared that Rappler was “fully owned” by the Americans and therefore in violation of the constitution.

Duterte later publicly declared: “Not only is Rappler’s news fake, it being Filipino is also fake.”

Ressa fully denies the claim, but in August 2017, the Philippine securities and exchange commission (SEC) began what Ressa described as a “six month fishing expedition” demanding hundreds of documents. By January 2017, the SEC had decided to revoke Rappler’s license but the case went to the court of appeals, where it was remanded back to the SEC for having no basis.

The SEC then began to investigate Rappler for tax evasion, alleging that the company failed to pay the $3m in tax due on the company’s 2015 bond sales to two foreign parties. While usually such investigations take a minimum of a year, the SEC decided to press charges in just five months. A warrant for Ressa’s arrest was issued in November 2018, and she turned herself into the authorities days later, where she posted bail and was released. The case is still ongoing. Ressa told the Guardian the charges were “without basis and clearly politically motivated”.

Ressa is not the only Rappler journalist targeted. Last year, Rappler’s political reporter was also banned from the presidential palace where press briefings take place.

What are the new charges she is facing?

Last week, Ressa and Rappler were hit with yet another lawsuit, this time for alleged cyber-libel relating to a story published in 2012 about Philippine businessman Wildredo Keng and his connections to a top court judge. Keng had originally filed a lawsuit in 2017 claiming defamation which was it was dropped, but it was refiled again last year.

However, as Rappler lawyers have pointed out, the cyber-libel law being used against Rappler and Ressa was enacted four months after the story was published.

Nonetheless, on Wednesday, four plainclothes officers arrived at the Rappler headquarters in Manila and arrested Ressa, taking her to the National Bureau of Investigation. She was held overnight, and was released on Thursday morning after posting bail of 100,000 Philipines peso (£1,400).

What happens next?

Ressa has vowed to keep fighting and to continue Rappler’s journalism. No court dates or timelines have been set for either the tax evasion and cyber-libel cases.

As Ressa told the Guardian last year: “I actually don’t see Duterte as my enemy but I guess it was him who brought the battle to us.”



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