MADNESS

The abduction of Ces Drilon and her crew was a turning point for us journalists.

In between small talks earlier this week, it was not hard to sense a lot of us actually wanted to go to Sulu to cover Drilon and to “join the action.” After all, it seemed safe if we had security and going to Mindanao was like the proper thing to do. (Un)fortunately I had an option and it was to stay in Manila. What’s the point of going there if one can still get the details while at the safest possible place?

Madness, as most of us would like to call it, is the reason why some journalists push themselves to the limit. Sometimes while pursuing our stories, we actually decide based on our instinct, experience, gut feel, even horoscope (no I’m just guessing at this one!).

But madness is not a bad thing, I’m telling you. It is borne out of passion, out of our need to deliver the news freshly served because it is the public’s right to know; and out of our desire to experience everything first hand.

While a normal citizen would scamper during a bombing or a shootout, the journalist (photographers, cameramen as well) initially takes cover but would keep peeking his/her head into the realms of danger–searching for a story, looking for an angle, eventually forgetting that she/he is above all a daughter/son, a Mother/Father and NOT just a journalist.

This was Drilon’s mistake. And we can’t fully blame her; we’re all just happy that she’s safe and sound, even happier that she learned her lesson well. The full commitment to the job is a mistake a lot of journalists have committed at various lengths, and it is also the kind of mistake we usually repeat–without regrets.

The National Union of Journalists of the Philippines was right when it said we must “soberly reflect” on Drilon’s case.

“We urge everyone in the industry, from correspondents to media owners, to soberly reflect on this problem and come together to address this issue. We owe it to ourselves, to our families and to our audience,” the NUJP officers said.”

They could not have been more right. I indeed owe it to my family, friends, and readers. Cliche as it may be, no story is truly worth dying for.

——-

Drilon on ordeal: A ‘sobering experience’

Negotiator in Drilon kidnapping, son questioned by police

Military, police launch offensives vs Drilon abductors

Drilon et al in Zamboanga City–PNP spokesman

  1. June 19, 2008 at 10:42 am | #1

    Madness is a great term. I have often pondered as to why interviews could not be made by cellular phone, seeing that we are in the 21st century now aren’t we? Technology is touted for bringing journalism forward, and yet we can’t help but do things the old way.

    The Filipino is worth dying for, a story, as you say, is not.

    In any case, the questions abound, regarding this kidnapping, from ransom to government SOP. From news blackout, to the public’s right to know..

    My head is aching just thinking about it. Now this is madness added to the madness..

  2. June 29, 2008 at 12:55 pm | #2

    It does not occur to you brave, passionate journalists that in fact the kidnapping of Ces Drilon set up and encouraged the kidnappings that followed. Paying ransom only lays the ground work for the next kidnapping. Unfortunately for those four Basilan Electric Coop employees, for example, their employer is strapped for cash. While journalists romantically extol their bravery, these poor guyz could lose their heads!

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