Philippine authorities order Rappler to shut down, block access to 2 news websites

Maria Ressa—founder of the Rappler news website—poses with the 2018 Gwen Ifill Press Freedom Award at CPJ’s International Press Freedom Award ceremony on November 20, 2018. (Getty Images/Dia Dipasupil)

On Tuesday, Philippine authorities ordered the shutdown of independent news organization Rappler and the blocking of news websites Bulatlat and Pinoy Weekly. Maria Ressa, co-founder, CEO and executive editor of Rappler, was quoted in news reports Wednesday saying that the outlet would appeal the ruling.

Ressa, who is a 2021 Nobel Peace Prize laureate and the 2018 recipient of CPJ’s Gwen Ifill Press Freedom Award, and her news organization face a sustained campaign of legal persecution, which has also targeted her colleagues. In June alone, prosecutors threw out 28 cases of cyber libel against Rappler that had been filed since January.

The Philippine Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) order revoking Rappler’s license to operate is the first of its kind in history – both for the Commission and for Philippine media. The SEC decision upheld an earlier ruling revoking the news outlet’s operating license for violating foreign ownership rules, which Rappler denies.

SEC’s ruling against Rappler came just days before President Rodrigo Duterte stepped down after six years in power and President-elect Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. was inaugurated. In a public letter sent in May, CPJ called on Marcos to reverse his predecessor’s various press freedom-eroding actions and policies, including against Rappler and Altermidya network members.

Watch CPJ’s video on Rappler’s case here.

Meanwhile in Mexico, journalist Antonio de la Cruz was shot dead in Ciudad Victoria, the capital of the northern state of Tamaulipas, on Wednesday. In a press conference, prosecutor Irving Barrios said that de la Cruz, a reporter for the newspaper Expreso, was shot multiple times while in a car with his daughter. Mexico is the deadliest country for reporters in the Western Hemisphere. At least three journalists have been killed in the country in 2022 in direct relation to their work. CPJ is investigating another seven killings to determine the motive.

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