It is about being united as a nation overcoming our differences for the common good

Statement of the CBCP Episcopal Commission on Social Communications on the Shutting Down of ABS CBN

The Peace of our Lord be to all!

The CBCP Episcopal Commission on Social Communications is aware of the sentiments of our people regarding the lapse of the franchise of ABS CBN and the cease and desist order imposed upon them by the NTC. We recognize the importance of the role of the same corporation in the Philippine democratic landscape, as they, together with all other Philippine media entities represent the voice of the freedom of the press. They are part of the many media channels that contribute to the timely, objective and truthful dissemination of news and information bringing guidance and support to our people especially during this time of the COVID-19 pandemic crisis. We are aware of the fact that their closure also jeopardizes the livelihood of more than 11,000 employees, their families, and those whose businesses are directly or indirectly connected and are dependent on the continuous operation of the same media network.

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NTC order vs. ABS-CBN reeks of treachery, tyranny, and puts our people in danger

By the Movement Against Tyranny
May 5, 2020

The cease and desist order issued today by the National Telecommunications Commission (NTC) against ABS-CBN is a treacherous act by the Duterte administration against the network and to every Filipino’s right to free expression and a free press.

The order is part of a pattern of using the pandemic as a distraction while coming down hard on our freedoms even as the nation is helplessly quarantined. It’s not surprising that the lead agencies in the fight against the pandemic are headed by ex-generals. Meantime, the streets are crawling with police and soldiers like it were martial law.

ABS-CBN is being shut down as it steps up bravely and admirably in informing the public about the Covid-19 emergency. In the course of doing its job, it has revealed government shortcomings, possibly prompting Calida and NTC to go after the network at this time.

But the order goes against the recommendation of both chambers of Congress for the NTC to issue a provisional license to the network while it’s franchise renewal is being deliberated by the legislature.

More importantly, the closure of the country’s largest and widest broadcast network at this time of the Covid-19 pandemic, where news and information has become a matter of life and death, puts the health and safety of our people in jeopardy.

We call on NTC to  immediately rescind its order even as we call on ABS-CBN to resist this treacherous, highly irregular and dangerous order. Now is the time to stand up for our people’s right to information and a free press.#

Pastoral Instruction: Let us be one with the whole Church

My dear People of God in the Archdiocese of Manila,

As we strive to be personally connected with God, let us also be connected with each other in and through the Church as the Body of Christ. Let us join then in the activities that are meant to draw us closer to one another and to God.

I invite the parishes, religious communities and families of the faithful in their homes to participate in the Consecration to the Immaculate Heart of Mary on May 13, the 103th anniversary of the apparition in Fatima.

1.         At 8:30 in the morning, let us follow the live stream of the praying of the holy rosary and the prayer of consecration of the whole country to the Blessed Virgin.  This prayer will be done simultaneously all over the country. The National Shrine of Our Lady of Fatima in Valenzuela City will be the center of this activity.

2.         At 12 noon, let us unite our hearts as an archdiocese for the live streaming of the Eucharistic Celebration at the Manila Cathedral.  At the conclusion of the Mass, the bishop together with the Mayors of the different cities within the Archdiocese will consecrate the archdiocese and the cities to the Immaculate Heart of Mary.

In preparation for this important event, let us be one through a triduum of fasting, prayer and reflection on May 10, 11 and 12 through TV Maria live stream and Radio Veritas:

3:30 PM          Praying of the rosary and the Flores de Maria devotion
4:30 PM          Reflection of Bishop Broderick Pabillo
                        Prayers to be led by different sectors of the Church

TV Maria will live stream all these activities (TV Maria facebook page, Sky Cable – Channel 210; Destiny Cable – Channel 96; SatLite – Channel 102; Sky Direct – Channel 49; Cable Linek Channel 18). You can also tune in to Radio Veritas. I invite the social communication ministry of the parishes to hook in to broaden the reach of these broadcasts. Even individually please invite your friends and relatives in the archdiocese to participate in these activities.

Let us entrust ourselves to the maternal protection of Mary, our Mother during this time of crisis.  We pray that through her prayers as at Cana in Galilee, joy and celebration may return after this time of trial.

The Holy Father is calling for a day of prayer, fasting and acts of charity on May 14 to be participated in not only by Christians but by all religions to implore the Almighty to end this pandemic. Being in the Year of Ecumenism and Inter-religious Dialogue, this is a very concrete sign of common activity of all religions since prayer, fasting and acts of love are common to all, and we are all affected by this pandemic. I ask our faithful in the archdiocese to fully participate in this activity. To make our act of charity concrete, I invite everyone to extend material help to at least one person within your reach, no matter the amount, to make that person/s feel the care we have for each other. May this sign of unity among us draw us all to the One Source of all Goodness.

Thank you very much.

Sincerely yours in the Lord Jesus,

+ BRODERICK S. PABILLO
Apostolic Administrator of Manila
May 6, 2020

Protocol for religious service in the Archdiocese of Manila

To make our religious activities safer from the spread of the virus

Note: These guidelines are given due to our extraordinary situation. They are therefore temporary in nature. Furthermore, the situation is so fluid that we foresee that there will be other guidelines that will follow when the situation changes or when there are other directives that will come from the government or from the church hierarchy. These guidelines are given so that we are prepared when religious services will already be allowed.

Schedules:

1.         There should be at least a half hour gap between masses to allow the church to be disinfected after each service.

2.         Since we have lesser masses on Sundays, we can have more services on weekdays.

3.         Ask the people to come on the times when there are lesser people. Encourage the faithful to come on weekday masses if they cannot come on Sundays.

4.         The presence of difficulty, and in some cases impossibility, of fulfilling the Sunday obligation renders the obligation suspended during these extraordinary circumstances.   While Sunday and weekday Masses will already be celebrated in parishes, the live streaming of Masses, at least on Sundays, will continue for those who are unable to participate in the community celebrations due to sickness, old age, fear and caution.

5.         Because we will have lesser mass schedules on Sundays and less people can come on Sundays, the parishes may start their “anticipated masses” on Saturdays at 3 pm, thus have three or four masses on Saturdays and invite the people to join in these masses.

6.         We can have more schedules of baptisms during the week so that people will not congregate on Sundays

Physical structure:

1.         Clearly mark the entrance and exits to the church so that incoming people will not meet outgoing ones. Have marshals who shall man the entrance and exits on Sundays to keep order.

2.         Each entrance and exit should have footbath container.

3.         There should be hand sanitizers at the entrances.

4.         The places to be occupied in the pews should be indicated to help people keep social/ physical distancing. The people should strictly occupy only those places indicated.

5.         There should be notices in front of religious images telling people not to touch or wipe the images. Short prayers can be posted in front of the images to help the people pray in front of them.

6.         All holy water fonts should be emptied and covered so that they may not be used.

7.         If the adoration chapel is small and enclosed, it is better not to open it. Encourage the people to pray in church instead.

8.         Let there be non-touch garbage disposal bins in parish offices and around the church and remind the people to dispose their waste in the proper places. The maintenance people in the parishes are to be taught to properly dispose the garbage.

9.         Let the parish comfort rooms be properly maintained and soap be available for proper hand washing.

10.       For those churches which are air-conditioned, it would be better if the air-conditioning is not used during this time. It will not be so hot after all  because there will not be any over-crowding. Explain to the people that open areas are better than closed spaces to ward off the virus.

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Serving the Filipino at this Critical Hour!

Photo courtesy of Politico

MEDIA PRACTITIONERS, together with first responders among whom are our besieged health workers, have held the line against the further spread of the pandemic in our country.

The NTC’s “Cease and Desist” order to ABS-CBN to abruptly shut down its operations comes at the worst of times.  It comes at a time when we are trying to contain a contagion that has brought our nation down on its knees.  Never before did our country need to unify all our citizens where communication is crucial, and unimpeded independent media is vital. 

The ABS-CBN network with the widest reach in the country not only has the potential but in fact has been helping to inform and mobilize our people to put up our community defenses against the deadly coronavirus.

Our people felt assured by the position of our legislators that the reasonable solution is a provisional permit while the renewal of the franchise was being considered by the Congress, with its sole power to make that decision.  The NTC seemed agreeable to it with the favorable opinion of the Secretary of Justice.  The turn of events otherwise through the initiative of the Solicitor General is a disservice to our people who are already struggling to survive on a day-to-day basis and look to responsible media to inform their decisions and actions in that regard.

Moreover, the NTC action in the face of the inactivity of Congress runs contrary to the mandates in the Constitution: 

“The State SHALL provide the policy environment” for “communication structures suitable to the NEEDS of the nation and the BALANCED FLOW of information…across the country.”  (Article XVI, Section 10, General Provisions of the 1987 Philippine Constitution)

We support the ABS-CBN’s right to a free and fair process.  We thank its frontliners for their invaluable work to motivate our people to focus on the one undertaking that must bring us together at this time: to defeat the pandemic and provide a better future particularly to those who are most vulnerable among our people.

We call on the courage our people have shown in the past against repressive rule to express themselves again for the common good.

Signatories of Framers of the 1987 Constitution:
Felicitas Arroyo
Florangel Rosario Braid
Ed Garcia and
Christian S. Monsod

Statement On ABS-CBN Shutdown

NASSA/CARITAS PH
May 6, 2020

On May 5, 2020, the National Telecommunications Commission (NTC) has issued a cease-and-desist order against broadcast media giant, ABS-CBN, due to the expiration of its congressional franchise citing Republic Act 3846 or the Radio Control Law.

Since 2016, ABS-CBN worked for franchise renewal, and bills had been filed since then, and many congressional hearings were held, until it was overtaken by the COVID-19 pandemic. The non-renewal was further caused by the legislative inaction and weaponizing of power for political gain.

It is very unfortunate that we need to be sidelined by this equally important matter when the nation is battling against an invisible enemy, claiming thousands of lives already and endangering even millions more due to the devastating socio-economic impacts of the global health emergency.

Thus as the social action arm of the Catholic Church in the Philippines, NASSA/Caritas Philippines would like to:

1. Express solidarity and sympathy with the employees and their families who would lose their jobs when the network operation stops. We know that this is the most inopportune time for this to happen, when people are already in crisis and are suffering.

2. Appeal for government’s sense of fairness and clemency in applying the letter of the law in view of the common good and to respect the right of the people to have wide access to news and information being provided by the network. Media should be considered a partner in nation building, and it should not be unnecessarily harassed when they are critical or not towing the line of any administration.

3. Stand for freedom of the press and speech. The government or any political figure for that matter do not have the right to curtail these freedoms safeguarded and warranted in the Philippine constitution. We encourage our government leaders to be brave enough to face the public with the truth, and not hide under the guise of political power, harassment and intimidation.

4. Pray that in this time of pandemic, those in position will choose mercy and compassion over personal interests; moral obligation versus legal requirements, and people over powerplay.

The press (media) is considered the fourth state: “the guardian of veritas (truth)” and holds a special responsibility to influence, form and inspire the public with the truth. The Catholic Church, through NASSA/Caritas Philippines will and always stand for and with the truth, through love, justice and peace.

Together, let us heal as one. We are Caritas.

Signed:

Bp. Jose Colin Bagaforo, D.D.
National Director, NASSA/Caritas Philippines

Bp. Gerardo Alminaza, D.D.
Vice Chair, Episcopal Commission on Social Action-Justice and Peace (ECSA-JP)

Invitation to Post Quarantine Conversations II

May 5, 2020

To: All Heads: National Lay Organizations &
Arch/Diocesan Councils of the Laity

 Dear Brothers & Sisters,

The peace and love of the risen Lord be with you!

As we continue to be confined for safety in our homes, we would like to take this as an opportunity to continually harness the use of modern technology and to carry on our mission of forming community of disciples amidst this situation.

We are pleased then to invite you and your members to a Post Quarantine Conversations II: New Mindsets for Emerging and Alternative Ministries… A Post-Quarantine Conversation, on May 9, Saturday, 2:00 to 4:00 PM. The topic would be on Mental Health.

We will be using a Zoom application for this. Kindly let us know if you are capable and available to join this conversation by replying to this email on or before May 7, so that we could send you the link, ID & Password, where you could register to actively participate. It will be on a first- come – first- serve basis since participants are limited to 100 persons only.

Our main presentor is Dr. Joff Quiring, a Diplomate of the Specialty Board of the Philippine Psychiatry and a member of the Philippine Psychiatric Association. He is also a young Coordinator-Leader of the Ang Ligaya ng Panginoon Community.

Most Rev. Broderick Pabillo and the Laiko Board Members will join us also in this sharing.

Thank you. Rest assured of my prayers for you and your loved ones’ safety!

Sincerely in the service of the Lord,

LAIKO Statement of Affirmation and Appeal

Goodness is an Overflow of God’s Goodness to Us!

The Sangguniang Laiko ng Pilipinas affirms and congratulates the Inter-Agency Task Force for its hard work and effort in stemming the tide of the Pandemic Virus.  We are highly cognizant of the measures it has implemented to address the impact of the pandemic in the economy, food security and the general well-being of the Filipino people. Hence as good citizens, we gladly complied with the guidelines set-forth by the IATF to prevent even more the spread of the Covid-19.

As the IATF continues to assess its next moves after May 15, 2020, and with the withdrawal of its earlier decision to allow Religious gatherings (in general)  in areas declared as General Community Quarantines (GCQ), we present  this appeal so as to give the Filipinos a sense of the new normal in their spiritual gatherings and an opportunity to uplift  our Spiritual Well-being,  which are both humane and essential.

The Sangguniang Laiko ng Pilipinas believes that giving the people the opportunity to connect with the Almighty God, especially through religious encounters and spiritual events will directly translate into goodness for themselves and for others. These are great opportunities to inspire and challenge them to do good things and share from the treasury of their good heart. “A good person produces good things from the treasury of a good heart” (Luke 6:45)

We recommend that a further review be made, which may include looking into the possibility of delegating this decision to the local executives, who have greater appreciation, information and control over the Religious groups present among their constituents. We are willing to submit our plans, protocols and guidelines to assure them of our strict observance of these safety and health measures.

With strict compliance to Government Guidelines on Social Distancing and Sanitation, the lay faithful requests for Religious Gatherings (Ex. Catholic Masses, Baptisms, Anointing of the Sick and Funerals, etc.) to be allowed in the GCQ areas. We demand that our right to religious worship be not curtailed when the necessary safeguards are followed.

 For the Laiko Board of Directors,

ROUQUEL A. PONTE
President
04 May 2020

2020 Laudato Si’ Week Celebration

Every 3rd week of May, Catholics in the entire world are celebrating the release of Laudato si’, Pope Francis’ encyclical letter to all mankind calling everyone to “Listen to the cry of the Earth and the cry of the poor”. This is the 5th year since its release. Amidst the ecological crises and this pandemic that we are facing, Catholics are once again called to reflect Pope Francis’ call.

Ecological Crisis and Coronavirus 2019

Before the coronavirus ravaged the entire world, let us not forget that we are in the brink of the 6th mass extinction as projected by scientists from 153 countries. With the unprecedented heating up of the atmosphere, garbage, deforestation, continuous extraction of minerals from the surface of the earth, and pollution, the earth is a mess, and almost dead. It is as filthy as a pit. But mankind behave like everything is normal and okay, it consumes as if our resources is unlimited, as if we are not in ecological crisis, and as if no one is suffering.

Photo by Enric Fontcuberta/EPA

And then coronavirus happened. Coronavirus 2019 is a virus that scientists believed to have come from wild animals that are consumed in Wuhan, China where the virus originated. Primatologist and anthropologist Jane Goodall said that the “global disregard of nature has brought the coronavirus pandemic”. As people destroy the animals’ home and hunt wild animals for food, transfer of virus from animals to humans become inevitable. Read more

2020 Laudato Si Celebration

The battle to stop this pandemic may take time, recovering may take even longer. The Pope, through the Laudato Si, is again inviting us to reflect on the state of the environment and its impact to the poorest sector of society who are suffering the most to ‘Listen to the Cry of the Earth and the Cry of the Poor’.

The Philippine Misereor Partnership, Inc. (PMPI) is responding through a week of more pronounced actions:

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Church demands dismissal of charges against 42 mourners arrested on May 1, 2020

PCPR Statement

The LORD is a stronghold for the oppressed, a stronghold in times of trouble.  (Psalms 9:9)

The Promotion of Church People’s Response (PCPR) calls for withdrawal or dismissal of charges against 42 persons who sought to lay a wreath and light candles at the place where activist and aid worker Jose Reynaldo “Jory” Porquia was slain. The 42 member indignation caravan was composed of family, friends, and colleagues, including Fr. Marco Sulayao, chairperson for Panay and Guimaras, and two other members of the Promotion of Church People’s Response.

On their way to the place where Jory had been helplessly gunned down, the caravan was stopped by Iloilo police.  After three attempts to negotiate their passage, the caravan’s leaders decided to turn back; however, police in full battle gear surrounded the group to arrest them by force.  PCPR chairperson for Panay and Guimaras Fr. Marco Sulayao and also Iglesia Filipina Independiente priest sought intervene and reason out with the police, but instead Fr. Marco was shamelessly handcuffed and brought with the 41 others  to the Jaro Police Station.

This blatant violation of basic rights to redress further exacerbate indignation over the government’s failure to protect citizens like Jory Porquia.  The deep-felt need to express grief and outrage over such a brutal murder of a community leader has been rubbed raw with the heavy-handed response by police forces.  Jory Porquia was beloved by the poor, for whom he had been working to provide aid and food assistance before his slay.

The indignation caravan observed necessary physical distancing, even as they were compelled to engage a visible action to honor the memory of their admired friend and leader. Denying people the right to grieve is deplorable. Treating them like criminals and seeking to portray them as reckless violators of the law is not only false, it is both morally bankrupt and without compassion.  Enhanced community quarantine measures for physical distancing should not result in people being brutalized and then forced into close spaces as has happened in this case.

The caravan had resolved to turn back. Yet, the police, perhaps excited or even cajoled to catch alleged violators, misinterpreted the law and overbroad assumed powers, ultimately causing undue strife for people already beleaguered with grief and the injustice of the brutal killing of their loved one.

Jory survived the Marcos dictatorship, including multiple illegal arrests.  Now, those who are searching for truth and accountability are the ones to endure illegal arrest.  The inhumane and heavy-handed violence by the Iloilo police lays bare all-too-common abusive treatment by state forces, under the grossly mismanaged and militarized response of the Duterte government to the NCov-SARS2 pandemic.

Even as good-hearted persons demonstrated every intention to uphold community protocols to fight COVID-19, they were callously mistreated by heartless and vicious police actions.  In other places, such New Orleans and Chicago, USA, caravans have become an alternative for both grieving for the dead and lifting up the spirits of the living.  In this case, the compliant, yet indignant, arrest of Fr. Marco Sulayao makes clear that the voice of the people will not be silenced, even under arrest. Killings of activists and aid workers like Jory Porquia cannot be covered-up under a guise of misplaced and misapplied quarantine rules.

We join the call for justice for Jory Porquia and demand the withdrawal of all charges against the 41 arrested grieving friends, family and colleagues as well as their legal counsel.  We call for the arresting officers–whose inhumane and vicious response to a peaceful caravan and memorial has caused undue stress and psychological trauma to the victims—to be held accountable. We urge the Duterte government to address the spread of COVID-19 through health protocols, without violating the democratic and human rights of the Filipino people.

Without ceasing, we pray that the Filipino people will work together to fight the spread of COVID-19 while also safeguarding dearly held democratic and civil liberties.  It is never criminal to feed the hungry.  It is never illegal to express dissent.  We must be vigilant and persistent in doing what is upright and honorable, especially during this troubling and life-threatening pandemic that seems to have unleashed tyranny by state forces.

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