
"Media's job is to tell the story, but no story is worth even one life." This is how the ABS-CBN looked at the hostage-taking coverage that took more than three days to cover. In fact the incident continues to draw stories and coverages.
Here is the full statement:
"We will always cooperate with authorities in trying to resolve complex situations like the Aug 23 hostage crisis.
If the government had called for a news blackout, ABS-CBN would have supported it.
We are done with an initial assessment of our coverage and continue to review our policies.
We exercised self-restraint on Monday:
1. We refused to air the hostage taker's threats live about a 3 pm deadline to avoid fuelling public fear.
2. We refused to air the hostage taker's interview until after negotiations were finished.
3. We refused to be part of hostage negotiations.
4. All throughout the day and until the first shots were aired, we kept our cameras 400 meters away from the bus, giving us shaky video that viewers complained about. Our teams never crossed the police line.
5. Although we had access to members of the police reaction team, we held back interviews which could compromise their plans and/or location.
6. After the police tried to arrest the hostage taker's brother, our team physically stepped back to comply with police request.
7. After the assault began, we tried to limit our shots to avoid showing police movements. We stayed with extreme close-ups or wide shots.
8. We immediately complied when police asked us to turn off our lights explaining the grainy shots viewers complained about.
9. We avoided tampering with evidence at crime scene. Instead, we asked Soco to shoot the video instead of entering the bus ourselves.
This wasn't enough.
We acknowledge airing a report that detailed the position of the police during the assault.
During the arrest of Gregorio Mendoza, we considered pulling away from the coverage but a man was crying for help.
In other countries around the world, governments set the ground rules for situations like this. One network cannot unilaterally declare a news blackout. Press freedom issues take a back seat during situations like this - where the government already has the power to define the terms to media.
We are taking the public's views to heart. Monday's tragic events triggered intense soul-searching for us. Such is the irony of a profession that wields so much power but relies entirely on self-doubt to gain --- and keep --- its credibility.
We ask our broadcast colleagues to join us in an industry review. Let us unite and work together to put in place measures to collectively decide when we stop live coverage in the absence of government presence of mind."
Well said. I personally veered away from the particular news coverage, even if I knew it would have earned me many things other than monetary values.
I have yet to process my attitude towards such gory coverages, like that bus crash in Benguet the other week. # Lyn V. Ramo
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and for those who are taking pictures in front of hostage taking,
i think that they don't know what they are doing,
it's not a drill but it was real a real nightmare.
but now a know that they are ashamed and asking for forgiveness,
i know that this kind of tragic moment is so hard to forget,
no one wants this to happen,
we also care for those people who died so bad in the hands of terror,
now we're putting our foot at the same shoes that you are wearing right now
and it felt so bad it hearts me so much,
i feel pain like the pain you've caring,
it's not the color that matters but a life that we'll miss.
may God bless all those soul and may God rest them in peace.
peace be with us