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House panels asked to probe KWF鈥檚 memo banning alleged subversive books

鈥楾hought control鈥: Books in Filipino fall victims to terror law鈥檚 folly

Scholars and organizations have condemned the KWF鈥檚 move to cease printing and remove from libraries these books for allegedly being subversive. (FILE PHOTOS by Komisyon sa Wikang Filipino)

MANILA, Philippines 鈥 Several panels within the House of Representatives have asked to conduct a joint inquiry on the Komisyon sa Wikang Filipino (KWF) memorandum banning five books deemed to have subversive content, as it is supposedly illegal.

Albay 1st District Rep. Edcel Lagman on Monday filed House Resolution No. 239, which, if approved during a plenary session, directs the House committees on human rights, basic education and culture, and higher and technical education to probe KWF鈥檚 now-controversial memo.

According to Lagman, the KWF memorandum is unconstitutional and illegal, especially as the said Commission is not authorized to censor publications as its primary mandate is to ensure the enrichment of the Filipino language.

鈥淭he said Memorandum is a patently unconstitutional edict, an obtrusive weapon of thought control, an unmitigated censorship and a wanton assault on academic freedom [鈥 the KWF has no power and is not authorized under R.A. No. 7104, its enabling statute, to ban and censor writings in Filipino,鈥 Lagman said in the resolution.

鈥淚ts principal mandate is 鈥榯o ensure and promote the evolution and development and further enrichment of Filipino as the national language of the Philippines, on the basis of existing Philippine and other languages鈥, but it has no power to destroy or proscribe writings in Filipino,鈥 he noted.

Before the resolution was filed, Lagman delivered a privilege speech during Monday鈥檚 session where he stressed that the 1987 Constitution and jurisprudence from the Supreme Court decisions protect the right to free expression.

The Albay lawmaker stressed that the 1987 Constitution鈥檚 Bill of Rights explicitly states, 鈥 No law shall be passed abridging the freedom of speech, of expression, or of the press.鈥

A Supreme Court ruling about former Justice secretary Raul Gonzales, telling media not to air the controversial 鈥淗ello Garci鈥 wiretap tapes that contained conversations between former president Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and former poll official Virgilio Garcillano, struck down the warning as restricting free speech.

鈥淭he Supreme Court nullified the official directives of the respondents warning the media on airing the alleged wiretapped conversation for 鈥榗onstituting unconstitutional prior restraint on the exercise of freedom of speech and the press鈥 or the freedom of expression,鈥 Lagman said.

鈥淐hief Justice Reynato Puno, the ponente of Chavez vs. Gonzalez, stressed that 鈥楾he right belongs as well 鈥 if not more 鈥 to those who question, who do not conform, who differ,'鈥 he added.

Scholars and organizations have condemned the KWF鈥檚 move to cease printing and remove from libraries the following books for allegedly being subversive:

READ: Language agency joins book purge, tags 5 鈥榮ubversive鈥 works聽

But Lagman claimed that only two of the KWF鈥檚 commissioners had signed the memorandum, putting more questions on whether the directive is valid.

鈥淭he controversial Memorandum was signed only by the two full-time Commissioners, namely, Commissioners Carmelita Abdurahman and Benjamin Mendillo, out of 11 Commissioners including Chairman Arthur Casanova,鈥 he said.

鈥淭he Memorandum does not have the conformity of the requisite majority of the Commissioners and it does not even have the imprimatur of the Chairman,鈥 he added.

Other sectors have called out KWF 鈥 and eventually, broadcast company SMNI and the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-ELCAC) for allegedly red-tagging Filipino authors and the KWF, including its Chairperson Arthur Casanova.

Casanova was accused of allowing subversive materials to be published, but the KWF chair said such accusations are already stepping on the right to free expression.

READ: KWF chair, language orgs decry red-tagging of books, authors聽

During the same session, Kabataan party-list Rep. Raoul Manuel speculated that Filipino hero and author Jose Rizal would have been called an enemy of the state if he were alive today as he would be red-tagged and his books deemed to have contents inciting terrorism.

Manuel also asked whether Rizal and his fellow hero, revolution group Katipunan co-founder Andres Bonifacio would be censored or considered terrorists if they were alive today 鈥 even if they are espousing pro-Filipino ideas.

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