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Radio broadcaster jailed for libel


For failing to defend himself in court because he could not afford a lawyer, a radio broadcaster from Davao City has been convicted of libel and is now serving time in jail. Alex Adonis, who used to be a commentator of dxMF Bombo Radyo (Booming Radio), was convicted of libel by Regional Trial Court Branch 17 Judge Renato Fuentes and sentenced to four years and six months in prison. The libel case was filed by Davao First District Representative Prospero Nograles, who is also the house majority floorleader, in October 2001 because of a report by Adonis. Adonis claimed that the congressman was seen running naked in a Manila hotel shortly after the husband of a woman he was having an affair with caught them in bed. Nograles denied the allegation. Fuentes, however, acquitted Adonis’ co-accused, Dan Vicente, the station manager of Bombo Radyo General Santos, a province of South Cotabato, located south of Davao. Online publication Mindanao Times reported that Fuentes absolved Vicente due to the death of the prosecution’s primary witness who heard the Vicente and Adonis’ broadcast. Adonis, who has spent 18 years in the media industry, however, failed to defend himself in court and the verdict against him was promulgated in absentia. He was arrested by the police in the Bangkerohan Public Market of Davao City while he was visiting his mother on February 19, 2007. Davaotoday, an online publication, reported that financial woes were a major factor in Adonis’ conviction. Adonis, who has a wife and two daughters, had been working on a P7,500 ($150) a month salary in Bombo Radyo Davao. In 2004, he was reassigned to Bombo Radyo’s station in Cagayan de Oro, 500 kilometers away from Davao. Adonis was given an additional P3,000 ($60) by the station as relocation allowance which stopped after three months. The removal of the P3,000 allowance started Adonis’ financial problems. “I had to rent a room at P1,000 ($20). When payday came, there was barely enough left for my children, who were already in college," Adonis told davaotoday. Adonis also made an arrangement with an eatery to allow him to eat there on credit, davaotoday reported. Adonis also had a hard time traveling back and forth from Cagayan de Oro to Davao, which is seven hours by bus, for his work and court trial. “To attend hearings, I had to finish radio program first before I left Cagayan de Oro that same evening, so I would arrive in Davao at 8:00 am the next day, in time for the 9:00 am hearing of the case. Afterwards, I had to rush back to Cagayan de Oro again in time for my radio program that same day at 6:30 in the evening," Adonis said. “Sometimes I couldn’t even afford the bus fare to Davao." Adonis then disappeared from the radio station in 2005 and was declared AWOL (Absence Without Leave), prompting his lawyer, whom Bombo Radyo claims they hired, to withdraw from the case. Without money to pay for another lawyer, Adonis stopped attending the hearings altogether. Adonis also said that he had wanted to apologize to Nograles but was hindered by Bombo Radyo. Bombo Radyo, however, issued a three-part statement published in the Mindanao Daily Mirror disputing Adonis’ claim. “Adonis should not blame Bombo Radyo, his former employer, for his conviction. He only has himself to blame for his woes. His allegations that he was not allowed to make a public apology to Congressman Nograles and that Bombo Radyo did not support him in his case are preposterous.These claims are pure lies concocted by him to gain public sympathy at the expense of his former employer who supported him and his co-accused from day one of the case," Bombo Radyo said in the statement. “Without questioning the merits of the case or the court’s decision, Adonis’ case shows what happens to broadcasters who can’t afford to hire lawyers but dare criticize a high-ranking government official, who has all the backing of power," said Dodong Solis, manager of dxDC radio station in Davao. “It was not so much that Lex Adonis had criticized Nograles on the air," Solis said. “It was more of Lex Adonis being poor, that he was not able to make full use of the privileges normally accorded by the law to citizens like him that he ended up where he is now." Upon hearing the decision last January, Nograles said: “That’s good news". CMFR