After Senate shooting incident, Erwin Tulfo pushes for Media Magna Carta bill
At A Glance
- The broadcaster-turned-lawmaker lamented the ordeal experienced by reporters covering the Senate on May 13, the evening when violence broke out within the premises.
Calling it a "blatant disrespect" to journalists who risk their lives daily for meager benefits and no safety guarantees, Senator Erwin Tulfo on Sunday, May 17 renewed his push for the passage of the Media Workers’ Magna Carta in light of the recent shooting incident at the Senate.
The broadcaster-turned-lawmaker pointed to the ordeal experienced by reporters covering the Senate on May 13, the evening when violence broke out within the premises.
“The journalists play a crucial role in revealing the truth about what happened during the shootout. Who did fire first?” Tulfo said in a radio interview.
“The authorities present at the scene should have allowed the reporters, cameramen, to cover the premises,” he stressed.
The video footage taken by the media personnel would then serve as proof if the security, the law enforcement, really followed the protocol.
“At the same time, it is also to protect them because when so-called perpetrators find out that there’s media presence, they will think twice before firing their guns,” he added.
Tulfo also noted that the media personnel caught in the crossfire primarily cover the Senate beat and are not trained for police or combat reporting.
“For instance, the Senate media are not accustomed to these kinds of shootouts. Certainly, it traumatized them—we even heard some reporters crying while doing their live commentary. That’s how endangered they were at the moment,” he further said.
Tulfo said the incident is a reminder of the urgency of passing Senate Bill No. 249, or the “Magna Carta for Workers in the Media and News Industry Act,” one of his top 20 priority measures.
He said the bill seeks to standardize minimum compensation, overtime and night shift differential pay, security of tenure, hazard allowance, and insurance benefits, among others for media workers.
The measure, he said, not only seeks to improve journalists’ economic well-being, but also affirms their dignity and rights as they stand on the frontlines to hold the line for press freedom.
“The May 13 incident in the Senate which threatened the safety of Filipino reporters is only one of the daily struggles they face. Let us give them the compensation and support that they are entitled to,” he emphasized.