New York, November 21, 2005Unknown assailants shot and killed
two journalists in separate incidents over a three-day period. Newspaper
reporter Robert Ramos died Sunday night after being shot twice in the
head outside a market in Cabuyao, Laguna province, 30 miles (48 kilometers)
south of the capital, Manila. Radio announcer Ricardo "Ding" Uy, known
for his leftist political activities, was killed by a gunman outside his
home on Friday morning in Sorsogon City, Sorsogon province, 230 miles
(375 kilometers) southeast of Manila.
The motives in the killings were unknown, according to news reports. The
Committee to Protect Journalists is investigating to determine whether
they were connected to the men's work as journalists.
Ramos, 39, a reporter for the weekly tabloid Katapat, was waiting
for a ride home from work when two motorcycle-riding assailants shot him
twice in the head, according to police reports cited in the local media.
He was pronounced dead at the scene.
Uy, 49, was a radio broadcaster with DZRS-AM, president of the Media Reporters
Association, and the provincial coordinator of Bayan Muna (People First),
a leftist political party. Uy was shot five times by an assailant who
fled with an accomplice on a motorcycle, according to Deutsche Presse-Agentur.
Uy died soon after at a nearby hospital. In an interview with the ABS-CBN
news Web site, Bayan Muna Deputy Secretary General Roberto de Castro said
that Uy received threats before he was killed. De Castro said Uy was known
as a critic of the army.
The National Union of Journalists in the Philippines (NUJP) condemned
the killings. The NUJP also criticized President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo
for not doing more to prevent the murders of journalists, claiming that
more journalists have died in the Philippines since Arroyo took power
in 2001 than during the Marcos era of martial law in the 1980s.
In May, CPJ named the Philippines the most murderous country in the world
for journalists. Read
the report.
Three months later, a CPJ investigation found that a culture of corruption,
guns, and lawlessness had fueled the record-setting number of murders.
Read the report.:

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