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Nobel laureate and journalist Maria Ressa acquitted by Philippine court

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Philippine Nobel laureate Maria Ressa and her news site Rappler were acquitted by a court of tax evasion charges on Wednesday, a judge said, handing Ressa a victory in a case the veteran journalist has described as part of a pattern of harassment.

Ressa, who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize alongside a Russian journalist in 2021, is the head of Rappler, which earned a reputation for its in-depth reporting and tough scrutiny of former president Rodrigo Duterte.

“This acquittal is not just for Rappler. It is for every Filipino who has ever been unjustly accused,” Ressa said after the verdict, describing it as a win for justice and the truth.

“These charges… were politically motivated… A brazen abuse of power,” she said.

The tax evasion case stemmed from accusations by the state revenue agency that Rappler had omitted from its tax returns the proceeds of a 2015 sale of depositary receipts to foreign investors, which later became the securities regulator’s basis to revoke its license.

The Philippine Justice Department said it respected the decision of the court.

Ressa, 59, is currently on bail as she appeals a six-year prison sentence handed down in 2020 for a libel conviction.

WATCH | Ressa contemplating the very real possibility of going to jail: 

Why Filipino journalist Maria Ressa is risking life in prison

Nobel Peace Prize-winning journalist Maria Ressa has spent her life exposing the truth in the Philippines, and now she could spend the rest of it in prison. She speaks to The National’s Adrienne Arsenault about why she’s risking it all to return home and warns that the world is “in the last two minutes of democracy.” [Note: This interview was conducted in Toronto on Oct. 21, 2022.]

She has been fighting a string of government lawsuits that have stoked international concern about media harassment in the Philippines, one of Asia’s most dangerous places for journalists.

The Philippines ranked 147 out of 180 countries in the 2022 World Press Freedom Index, and the Committee to Protect Journalists ranks the Philippines seventh in the world in its 2021 impunity index, which tracks deaths of media members whose killers go free.

WATCH | Ressa talks to CBC News about winning the Nobel Peace Prize: 

Filipina journalist Maria Ressa on receiving the Nobel Peace Prize

Ahead of accepting the Nobel Peace Prize, journalist Maria Ressa talks with Adrienne Arsenault about what the honour means to her and the challenges journalists face in the Philippines and around the world.

 

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