New York, August 16, 2004An unidentified gunman ambushed
radio commentator Edward Balida in the public market in Valencia City,
Bukidnon Province, on Friday, August 13. Balida, a broadcaster for the
Bukidnon affiliate of Radio Mindanao Network (RMN), survived the gunshot
wound, which shattered his left hand, according to local media groups
and news reports.
The Committee to Project Journalists (CPJ) is investigating whether the
attack was related to his journalism.
Balida stopped at the market before work early on the morning of August
13, when he heard a gunshot in the dark and realized that he had been
shot, according to the Philippines-based press freedom organization Center
for Media Freedom and Responsibility (CMFR).
Balida hosts an early-morning commentary program on the radio station
IFM-DXVR in Bukidnon, where he has worked since June. Balida told CMFR
he believes that the shooting was an assassination attempt in response
to his commentary against drug trafficking. Angelito Paraguya, RMN station
manager in the nearby town of Malaybalay, confirmed that Balida has been
a vocal supporter of the government's anti-drug crusade, which may have
angered local drug gangs, according to The Associated Press.
Police are investigating the incident but have not identified any suspects,
according to international news reports.
The shooting was the most recent in a string of violent attacks against
journalists in the Philippines. Local media groups have expressed alarm
at the rate and intensity of the attacks on the press and have called
for authorities to take steps to safeguard press freedom.
CPJ is investigating the murders of five journalists, all of them radio
commentators, killed in the Philippines in 2004. Forty-four journalists
have been killed since the nation instituted democratic rule in 1986.
No one has been prosecuted in any of these cases.

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