MANILA: Philippine media organizations have hit back at President Rodrigo Duterte for an expletive-laden speech that lashed out at a domestic newspaper and a television network, saying threats would not stop journalists from reporting the truth.
In two separate televised speeches on Thursday, Duterte unleashed a stream of profanity and threatened to use the government鈥檚 television station to hit back at dissenting media.
The populist leader singled out the Philippine Daily Inquirer newspaper for its coverage of his bloody war on drugs and a critic鈥檚 allegations that he had hidden millions of dollars of assets. He also hit out at media conglomerate ABS-CBN , but did not say why.
鈥淵our incoherent and foul-mouthed rant against two of the country鈥檚 major media outfits ... was not only unwarranted, it was absolutely twisted,鈥� the National Union of Journalists of the Philippines said in a statement.
The verbal attacks showed how little the president appreciated democracy and governance, the group added.
The president鈥檚 office has a rocky relationship with the media and frequently accuses the press of bias or of distorting remarks Duterte has made live on television.
Duterte enjoys huge support on social media and is fiercely defended by well-known bloggers with large followings on Facebook and have frequently targeted journalists.
He was angered by the Inquirer over a story that said his anti-drugs crackdown had primarily targeted poor Filipinos, a conclusion echoed by many rights groups.
More than 8,000 people, mostly drug users and small pushers, have been killed since Duterte took office at the end of June, about a third in police operations and many of the rest by unidentified gunmen.
鈥淵ou know, the Inquirer yesterday, they are b*t, son of a b***h. They are garbage,鈥� Duterte said on Thursday.
鈥淭hose journalists really have no shame. I tell you, they have no shame, including ABS-CBN.鈥�
鈥淚f you say in your editorial 鈥榮on of a b***h鈥� then I will hit back and say you, too, are a son of a b***h.鈥�
In a statement, the Inquirer said it 鈥渢akes exception to president Duterte鈥檚 remarks.鈥� ABS-CBN, which covered the speeches live, has not commented.
Duterte鈥檚 outburst follows criticism by his office about the New York Times and its coverage of the drugs war, which included a short documentary film and an editorial calling for a United Nations investigation.
Presidential spokesman Ernesto Abella called the coverage a 鈥渄emolition job鈥� and part of a conspiracy to undermine the government. He described one article as a 鈥渨ell-paid hack job.鈥�
In a television interview this week, the documentary producer said the Times had no agenda other than telling stories that it felt were important.
Philippine media groups cry foul over Duterte鈥檚 expletive-laden speech
-
{{#bullets}}
- {{value}} {{/bullets}}