Joaquin G.
Bernas, S.J.
When the big guns of the opposition group UNA visited the
embattled Governor Garcia, one would have expected them to make noisy political
capital not only of the suspension of the Governor but also of the closure of
the television station and of the newspaper office. But nothing of the sort seem to have happened. They seemed simply to have projected
themselves as the good guys performing a Christian act of mercy by visiting
someone in prison -– even if self-imprisoned. The Palace voice in turn also played a good guy role saying
with a smile that nothing will be done on Garcia until after the holidays.
What is really happening?
Should we attribute this seemingly friendly spirit to the Christmas
atmosphere? Or is this just the
calm before the storm?
Perhaps it is understandable that nothing vigorous was said by
the UNA leaders about the suspension of the Governor. Presumably they just wanted to project their respect for the
legal process because the Governor has already brought her suspension to the
Court of Appeals.
But what about the closure of the television and ratio stations?
Padlocking a television station and a newspaper publishing office is not an
ordinary occurrence in a democracy.
Such action takes place either during martial law or in the heat of
political contest. It is normally
regarded as an act of prior restraint and therefore presumed to be
unconstitutional. Could it be that
UNA has accepted Acting Governor
Magpale’s explanation?
The Acting Governor has justified the closure by saying that the
object of the closure was not to restrain speech or communication but to review
the operation of the outfits. In
other words her defense is the jurisprudential distinction between content-neutral regulations, i.e., concerned
not with the message but merely with the incidents of the speech, or one that
merely controls the time, place or manner, and under well-defined standards;
and a content-based restraint or
censorship, i.e., the restriction based on the subject matter of the
utterance or speech.
Content-based laws or regulations are generally treated as more
suspect than content-neutral laws because of judicial concern about its effect
on freedom of expression. Jurisprudence requires that content based regulation
be justified by the existence of a grave and present danger of an evil which
the state has the right to prevent.
Content-neutral regulations of speech or of conduct that may amount to
speech are subject to lesser but still heightened scrutiny.
This distinction between content based regulation of speech and
content neutral regulation was also appealed to by Cauayan City in Isabela when
the city closed Newsound, a radio
station operated by Bombo Radyo. The closure, according to the city, was
in conformity with zoning regulations and was in no way connected with the
broadcasts made by the station.
But the pretense of content neutral regulation was rejected on the
evidence that the radio station was an aggressive critic of the ruling
administration. Hence the closure
was declared invalid.
Unlike Newsound,
however, which was privately owned, the Cebu stations in controversy are, I am
told, run by the government. And
owned by the government, I suppose.
Acting Governor Magpale’s argument therefore comes down to saying that
the province, in the exercise of its right
not to speak, simply decided to gag itself. There is, after all, a constitutionally recognized right not
to speak. But her supporters seem
to be undermining her defense by giving the added reason that the stations were
being used to support the candidacy of opponents. Presumably, therefore, those running the stations were not
exactly friends of the Acting Governor.
They too have been effectively gagged. And this makes reliance on the right not to speak less than
credible.
Even, however, during this season of good cheer when good guys sheath
their daggers, let us recall what bad guys did in the past with the
constitutional prohibition of prior restraint. Let us hope that what happened then is not anywhere near to
being repeated in Cebu and in the nation.
The field of freedom of expression in the martial law decade is a
desolate wasteland. Newspapers and
magazines and radios closed by the regime at the start of martial law remained
closed, and so total was the regime's hold on media that none of these closures
occasioned a single freedom of expression case until 1984. Later during the martial law regime the
closure of the opposition of the newspaper We
Forum was followed by charges of rebellion against editors and
columnists. But the Court in 1984
did condemn the closure.
"Such closure is in the nature of previous restraint or censorship
abhorrent to the freedom of the press guaranteed under the fundamental law, and
constitutes virtual denial of petitioners' freedom to express themselves in
dissent."
Meanwhile, the President is back from Baguio muscle flexed to
grapple with national problems including the red-balloon-carrying bishops! Contrary to what people had thought, he
did sign the RH Bill before going to his vacation. And his trip was not a penitential pilgrimage in expiation for
having signed the bill.
31 December 2012
Television and Radio are supposed to be neutral that presents factual events and news without biases and prejudice. If it is government owned how exactly does freedom of expression come in? The issue on the closure is not about freedom of expression because if is being used for political partisan purpose then it becomes a criminal case and should it not be subject to a case of graft and corruption?
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