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Filipino journalist and Nobel Peace laureate Maria Ressa and her news organisation Rappler were acquitted on Wednesday, 18 January, by the Philippine Court of Tax Appeals in a tax evasion case.
Ressa had been charged with four counts of “alleged wilful and unlawful failure to supply correct and accurate information” in relation to investments and tax filings dating from 2015.
"This acquittal is not just for Rappler, it is for every Filipino who was unjustly accused," said Ressa after the acquittal.
It further criticised former Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte's attempts "to use the legal system to silence critical independent media."
"Rappler has been forced to defend 23 cases against it since 2018, seen by supporters as a deliberate tactic to stifle the news organisation’s operational capacity and deplete it financially. It has been feared that the new administration of President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. would pursue the same tactics as his predecessor," WAN-IFRA stated.
What were the charges?
The tax evasion charges against Rappler were related to the issuing of certain financial instruments known as Philippine Depositary Receipts (PDRs) to North Base Media and Omidyar Network in 2015.
The prosecution accused Rappler of acquiring taxable income and incurring obligations that they failed to fulfil.
However, Rappler argued that the company had not received taxable income from the issuing of the PDRs, said the statement from WAN-IFRA.
WAN-IFRA also stressed that Ressa and Rappler "should never have been confronted by these charges in the first place."
Ressa and Rappler journalist Reynaldo Santos Jr were also convicted of cyber libel in 2020. The case, which was registered in 2017, relates to a 2012 story on the site, written by Santos on a businessman's links with a judge of the high court. A complaint by the businessman in question was filed in 2017.
What's noteworthy is that the the law under which they were found guilty was passed four months after the original article was published.
But how? "The Justice Department has argued that the article was effectively republished in 2014 when a Rappler employee edited a spelling mistake, bringing it under the new law’s jurisdiction," the WAN-IFRA report stated.
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