“Only global solidarity among democracy’s defenders can successfully counter the combined aggression of its adversaries.” 

Freedom House, Freedom Report 2022

NOBEL PEACE PRIZE LAUREATES URGE PRESIDENT MARCOS TO ENSURE JUSTICE FOR MARIA RESSA

Philippine journalist and 2021 Nobel Peace Prize laureate Maria Ressa and her online news site, Rappler, have been subjected to a multi-pronged and sustained attack from multiple government agencies, initiated under the administration of former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte.  These attacks, including multiple false criminal charges, have threatened to imprison Maria, with a combined maximum sentence of 100 years, and shut down her online news site, Rappler. 

On Wednesday, January 18, 2023, the Philippine Court of Tax Appeals acquitted Ressa and Rappler of four of the charges against her, of tax evasion and failure to provide full information to the tax authorities in corporate filings. The charges were based on filings by the Philippine Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) with the Department of Justice in 2018 that claimed Rappler was not a news site at all but was a “seller if securities” for having brought private investment into the company. 

This is only the beginning. The charges being ruled on this week will be followed by more trials on other spurious charges, including being a “foreign agent,” based on Rappler having received investment from private individuals who are not citizens of the Philippines).

In June, 2020, Ressa former and Rappler researcher-writer Reynaldo Santos Jr. were convicted of cyber libel. These criminal charges resulted from a Rappler article suggesting that a Philippine businessman had inappropriate financial ties to a Supreme Court Judge. Ressa was sentenced to more than six years in prison.  She is currently out on bail while waiting for the case to come before the Supreme Court. It should be noted that the article was published before the law criminalizing cyber law was written into law. The law was applied “retroactively.”

Twelve Nobel Peace Prize laureates, including Ressa’s 2021 co-recipient Dmitri Muratov, and the three 2022 Nobel Peace Prize laureates (with political prisoner Ales Bialiatski represented by his wife, Natalia Pichuk) spoke out in an open letter to President Marcos, urging the President to bring these unjust attacks to an end and restore freedom of the press, a bedrock of democracy, in the Philippines.

 

2021 Co-Recipient of Nobel Peace Prize Dmitry Muratov Delivers a Message to President Marcos on Maria Ressa

Russian Journalist Dmitry Muratov sends a message to President Marcos about the political persecution of Philippine journalist and founder of the online news site Rappler, Maria Ressa. Muratov was co-founder and editor-in-chief of the Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta, the last remaining independent newspaper in Russia, now shuttered. Muratov and Ressa were co-recipients of the Nobel Peace Prize in 2021.

 

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Dr. José Ramos-Horta

Dr. José Ramos-Horta

Former Prime Minister and President of Timor-Leste, 1996 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate. 

Ban Ki-moon

Ban Ki-moon

Former Secretary General, United Nations. Member, the Elders. 

Danilo Turk

Danilo Turk

Former President of Slovenia, President, Global Leadership Alliance, Club of Madrid, former UN Assistant-Secretary-General

Lakhdar Brahimi

Lakhdar Brahimi

Former UN and Arab League Special Envoy for Syria, Member of the Elders

Dr. Gunnar Stålsett

Dr. Gunnar Stålsett

Emeritus Bishop of Oslo, Former Member of the Nobel Peace Committee, Chair of Religions for Peace

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