SOLIDARITY ON LABOR DAY: MEDIA WORKERS ARE WORKERS TOO
The National Union of Journalists of the Philippines is in solidarity with workers in the struggle for better pay and working conditions and the call for government action to lower prices and rein in inflation.
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Whether because we cover the Labor Day protests, are on duty on this holiday, or because we ourselves have experienced how difficult it has been to make ends meet with that we are paid for the amount of work we do, we remind ourselves this Labor Day that we are workers too.
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Our economic and labor rights are as much press freedom issues as the continued attempts to harass and silence our colleagues and threaten media independence as much as the attempts to censor us.
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Many of us work long hours with no overtime, holiday and night differential pay. When disasters or calamities strike, many cover without hazard pay or insurance.
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Many still work without recognition, without the mandated benefits of regular workers, and even without proper work contracts.
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Even in relatively safer environments like online newsrooms, many are expected to write as many as seven to ten stories a day while also producing social media and video content.
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We have been told to accept that media is a tiring profession and that our passion and our service to the public are payment enough.
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But recent wins at the National Labor Relations Commission and by employee unions at major newsrooms have shown that things can be better but often only when we make our demands heard.
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While we acknowledge the Media Workers' Welfare bill and other proposed legislation to improve our labor situation, we do not need to wait for Congress to start conversations in our +
newsrooms and offices on issues like pay, workload and our work conditions and how these can be improved.
Reference:
National Directorate
secretariat@nujp.org | +639602784263 #DefendPressFreedom
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[Statement] On World Press Freedom Day, we insist on being free
Nearly a year into the Marcos Jr. presidency and as dominant media adjusts to reporting on an administration that is not openly hostile to the press, it is tempting to consider that maybe the situation for media workers has improved and will continue improving.
On World Press Freedom Day, we remind ourselves that while there have been victories — in court, with the acquittal of Maria Ressa and Rappler of tax cases, for example — many, far too many of us are still facing threats and that our freedom is still fragile.
[Statement] The target is not just ABS-CBN but media
Thank you, party-list Rep. Mike Defensor for confirming what practically everyone knows but which this government and its minions have vainly tried to deny,-
-that the shutdown of ABS-CBN and the circus that has become of the House hearings into the network's franchise are, indeed, a press freedom issue.
Defensor has been quoted in news reports as suggesting the network do away with its news and public affairs component and limit its broadcast only to "shows na non-political."
[Statement] ON THE CYBER LIBEL VERDICT VS RAPPLER:
Freedom, justice and truth will prevail
June 15, 2020 will ever be remembered as a dark day, not only for independent Philippine media, but for all Filipinos.
The conviction of Rappler CEO Maria Ressa and former researcher-writer Reynaldo Santos Jr. has implications far beyond the case filed against them.
The decision basically affirms the State’s manipulation and weaponization of the law to stifle criticism and dissent, allowing the retroactive application of the law for a supposed offense committed before it existed by the simple expedience-
[Statement] Navallo did not deserve to be bullied for the truth
The National Union of Journalists of the Philippine denounces Sagip Rep. Rodante Marcoleta for turning the House hearing on ABS-CBN's franchise on Monday, June 8,—
—into a platform for personal revenge to bully reporter Mike Navallo.
It is also utterly insidious of Marcoleta to conflate a reporter's alleged misdeed with how ABS-CBN and its chairman emeritus Gabby Lopez have supposedly failed to instill what the good congressman considers "Filipino values."
For us in the media and arts alliance LODI, this is not a time to mince words.
President Duterte openly wanted to punish ABS-CBN for some campaign-period “grievance”.
Like minions, the institutions of government took turns giving what the president wanted: the pro-Duterte supermajority in Congress slept on the franchise renewal bills until the franchise expired—
[Statement] Justice for Rex Cornelio, 16th journalist slain under Duterte
The National Union of Journalists demands that authorities get to the bottom of the murder in Dumaguete City of Cornelio Pepino, more popularly known as Rex Cornelio, of dyMD Energy 93.7 FM,—
who was gunned down Tuesday night, May 5, 2020 as he headed home with his wife after hosting his regular program.
It is alarming that Cornelio was the third journalist - all broadcasters - murdered in as many years in what has long been famed as the "City of Gentle People."