Online media outfit-Rappler has been
described as the number one purveyor of fake news by those who are supporting
President Rodrigo Roa Duterte.
Rappler CEO and
American citizen Maria Ressa is facing tax and criminal cases in the country.
She has seen the
height of influence when the president was Noynoy Aquino III, a virtual
mechanical tool of the Yellows.
Maria Ressa of Rappler (Photo credit to owner) |
Under the
Duterte administration, it has now been checked and has lost its influence with
the rise of the independent bloggers who is always contradicting and correcting
its biased news.
In former
Ambassador’s Rigoberto Tiglao’s published article in the Manila Times, he
destroys another fake fact about Ressa which was aired in “60 Minutes” program
of the American TV network CBS.
Ressa described
the country under President Duterte as living in a hellish warzone.
“The situation in Manila is far worse
than any war zone that I’ve been in. In a war zone you know exactly where the
threats are coming from. I plan my way in and we plan our way out and you’re
there for a limited period of time. We’ve been living through three years of
this kind of hell.”
Tiglao gave
facts which decimates Ressa’s stand that the country is ‘worse than any war
zone’, she has never been a war correspondent in her whole career in media.
In pursuit of truthfulness,
clarity and for the knowledge of the reading public, we are quoting in full the
said article below titled “Ressa was never a war correspondent; she just
watched CNN’s video tapes"that was published Nov. 13, 2019.
Ressa was never a war
correspondent; she just watched CNN’s video tapes
Finally, Rappler Chief Executive Officer Maria Ressa revealed so starkly
her delusions, the absurd extent her humongous lies about our country and the
Duterte administration.
In a recent “60 Minutes” program of the American TV network CBS, she
said: “The situation in Manila is far worse than any war zone that I’ve been
in. In a war zone you know exactly where the threats are coming from. I plan my
way in and we plan our way out and you’re there for a limited period of time.
We’ve been living through three years of this kind of hell.”
For somebody who pontificates in detail how to act in a war zone, Ressa
was never a war correspondent
To bolster her credibility, the “60 Minutes” interviewer, Bill Whitaker,
even exaggerated Ressa’s background as a “war correspondent.” In Whitaker’s
very first statement in his introduction to his interview, he says, “For more
than 30 years, Filipino journalist Maria Ressa has risked her life in war
zones.”
As a CNN foreign correspondent (she was an American citizen) the only countries
Ressa covered was the Philippines from 1988 to 1995 and then Indonesia from
1995 to 2005, hardly war zones. She was recruited because she had a Filipino
mother and an Indonesian parent, whose family networks, the CNN thought, made
it easy for anybody, even for a greenhorn or even for one with a lackluster
performance in one job, to cover the two countries. Ressa was recruited in that
period when most media men thought CNN didn’t have chance against media giants
ABC, CBS, NBC and CBN. And after all, CNN paid pittance salaries that few
journalist dreaming to become a “foreign correspondent” thought of joining.
Sulu hotel
She was a war correspondent only if you think that staying in a Jolo, Sulu hotel to cover the Abu Sayyaf or in a Bali resort to report post-mortem the 2002 bombings in Bali by the Islamist terrorist Jemaah Islamiyah makes you one.
She was a war correspondent only if you think that staying in a Jolo, Sulu hotel to cover the Abu Sayyaf or in a Bali resort to report post-mortem the 2002 bombings in Bali by the Islamist terrorist Jemaah Islamiyah makes you one.
In 2005, after CNN reportedly told her it no longer needs her services,
ABS-CBN 2005 hired her to handle its news division. She was fired in 2010,
allegedly for violating her contract.
With overt funding initially from businessman Benjamin Bitanga (and
covertly from a Yellow tycoon, I was told) and later from American entities,
mainly Omidyar Network, she set up Rappler in 2012 with other veteran
journalists of the Yellow Cult who had covered Cory Aquino when she was
president. The news site had its heyday during President Benigno Aquino 3rd’s
regime, which it hailed as the country’s best president ever. (Sources allege
that Aquino’s cronies are still bank-rolling Rappler, which has spent over P400
million since it was set up, with two former Cory officials, her Economic
Planning secretary Solita Monsod and her Environment secretary Fulgencio
Factoran watching over these Yellow investments.)
Do the arithmetic to fact-check the claim of “60 Minutes” that she
risked her life in war zones for 30 years. From 1988 to 2005 in CNN is 17
years, in Manila and Jakarta, by no stretch of imagination can one claim to be
war zones.
Whitaker apparently classified the five years during which Ressa’s
allegedly had squabbles with her colleagues at the extravagantly furnished
ABS-CBN offices from 2005 to 2010 as war-zone coverage. That’s five years. Then
he classified Ressa’s seven years since 2012 to today as the highly paid CEO of
Rappler, and in the past few years receiving journalist awards from US entities
as covering a war zone.
Al Luzonee
Or maybe Ressa told him she covered an Islamic State attack in the war zone that wasthe Resorts World casino in June 2017, which she claimed was by a terrorist named Abu Khair al Luzonee?
Or maybe Ressa told him she covered an Islamic State attack in the war zone that wasthe Resorts World casino in June 2017, which she claimed was by a terrorist named Abu Khair al Luzonee?
That makes up Ressa’s journalistic career for 29 years, to be precise.
What war zone did Ressa cover?
There is, however, a reason explain why the “60 Minutes” interviewer
thought Ressa was a veteran covering war zones correspondent, and why she
herself may have been deluded she was an outstanding war correspondent.
To get some background on Ressa, Whitaker probably came across and
quickly browsed through her largely ignored 2003 book Seeds of Terror: An Eyewitness
Account of Al-Qaeda’s Newest Center. The book’s preface had an eye-popping
title that is the equivalent of a click-bait in books: “Face to face with Osama
bin Laden.” Obviously a lazy reporter, Whitaker didn’t bother to read the
preface.
Ressa was among the seven journalists who interviewed bin-Laden from
1993 to 2001?
No she wasn’t, that title was just to get a browser in a bookstore to
buy it.
Bin Laden
The closest Ressa had in meeting bin Laden and being in a war zone was in 2002 in a cubicle in CNN’s office in Atlanta. There, she watched for days — till the wee hours of the morning, she says — CNN’s news tapes on terrorism in the Middle East, including 251 tapes that the al-Qaeda leader had collected. The tapes got into the CNN’s possession of the network’s senior international correspondent Nic Robinson, who produced a much-awarded series titled “Terror on Tape: The Roots of Evil.”
The closest Ressa had in meeting bin Laden and being in a war zone was in 2002 in a cubicle in CNN’s office in Atlanta. There, she watched for days — till the wee hours of the morning, she says — CNN’s news tapes on terrorism in the Middle East, including 251 tapes that the al-Qaeda leader had collected. The tapes got into the CNN’s possession of the network’s senior international correspondent Nic Robinson, who produced a much-awarded series titled “Terror on Tape: The Roots of Evil.”
That Ressa got so absorbed in the tapes is obvious in her account of it
in her book, for example: “By now, in the middle of the night, I am the only
person on the entire floor. I am working through some of the other subjects in
bin Laden’s video library — tapes of news broadcasts that showed al-Qaeda’s
focus, including reports of Muslim conflicts in the Middle East, Chechnya,
Kashmir, Bosnia, Indonesia and the Philippines.”
She finds a tape in which she was reporting on the plot to kill John
Paul 2nd in his visit to Manila in 1995, and she reports her thoughts: “I try
to picture bin Laden watching me. It is chilling. Did he laugh at my naiveté?
Was he relieved at the simplistic picture my reports created?”
Ressa never covered a war zone for the CNN, ABS-CBN and Rappler — unless
she insists being in the fiscal’s office to pay the bond for her release after
being charged with tax evasion and libel was being in a war zone.
Ressa merely watched the bin Laden’s tapes and other CNN videotapes of
its war correspondents doing their jobs. Did she imagine she was CNN’s Nic
Robertson, the most famous war correspondent in recent years?
No wonder, it is the same kind of mind that imagines that this country’s
streets are littered with corpses because of the government’s war against
illegal drugs, its media, as well as opposition persecuted, and that it is
worse than a war zone.
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Report from Manila Times
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