Cebuano journo faces arrest for 4 counts of libel

By John Rey Saavedra

September 4, 2019, 5:17 pm

<p>Broadcast journalist and columnist Pablito "Bobby" Nalzaro. <em>(Photo from Bobby Nalzaro's Facebook page)</em></p>

Broadcast journalist and columnist Pablito "Bobby" Nalzaro. (Photo from Bobby Nalzaro's Facebook page)

CEBU CITY – A veteran broadcaster-columnist here on Tuesday sounded his impending arrest because of four libel cases filed by the son of this city’s former mayor.

Pablito Galeza Nalzaro, who is known in the media industry as Bobby Nalzaro, a columnist of Sunstar and sister publication, Superbalita, wrote in his Tuesday column that the four counts of libel filed by Ramon Miguel Osmeña, son of former Mayor Tomas Osmeña, were filed in court last week.

This, after the Cebu City Prosecutor’s Office denied the motion for reconsideration filed by his lawyer, Joan Baron of JP Garcia Law Office who also acts as legal counsel of the Sunstar publication.

Nalzaro described the charges against him as professional hazard.

“I am not saying that these cases constitute an attack on press freedom, but I can safely say without an iota of doubt and contradiction that facing these kinds of challenges are part of the so-called ‘hazards of the profession’,” he said.

“Sometimes, libel is being used as a tool to harass media people, as a way to silence them,” he said.

Nalzaro said the four libel cases filed against him consisted the “two counts of libel in violation of Article 353 of the Revised Penal Code (RPC) and another two counts in violation of Republic Act 10175 or the Cybercrime Prevention Act of 2012, which punishes the crime of libel committed through the use of the internet and online.”

His columns in two newspapers were also published in online edition.

“Just in case warrants of arrest will be served, I need to post bail in the amount of PHP180,000. The bail for libel under the Revised Penal Code is usually set at PHP10,000 per count, but it is higher in the cyber-libel class, which is set at PHP80,000 per count. Even in penalty, cyber-libel is higher compared to libel case in the RPC,” he added.

Nalzaro said this has been the 30th libel case in his 39 years as a broadcast-journalist. However, all the other cases were dismissed either at the prosecutor’s office or by the courts.

“My 'would-be arrest' is timely when the Cebu broadcast industry is celebrating the Broadcasters’ Month and the Cebu media will be observing the annual Cebu Press Freedom Week on Sept. 15 to 21,” said Nalzaro, who is a native of Dipolog City, Zamboanga del Norte.

“These cases stemmed from the articles I wrote in this paper and in Superbalita about the alleged involvement of Ramon Miguel Osmeña, son of ‘has-been’ mayor Tomas Osmeña, in the illegal butane canister refilling business a year ago,” he said.

In the complaint, the younger Osmeña claimed he was maligned in the column written by Nalzaro and published in Sunstar and Superbalita last Sept. 5 and 12 last year, respectively.

The commentary entitled “Projecting a poor image” and “Mikakak man diay,” named him as a stakeholder of an alleged illegal butane canister refilling business owned by a former Osmeña ally.

The article was based on an incident where the Pari-an police closed circuit camera caught the mayor intervening in the arrest of three butane canister traders arrested by the authorities.

Media reports said he pressured the police for the release of the suspects, saying in later reports he sympathized with the poor.

However, the columnist stood by the veracity of his information that the suspects were working with his son’s business, claiming that he was “able to secure the affidavit of Miguel’s former business partner who named him as one of those behind the business.”

That incident prompted President Rodrigo Duterte to order Police Regional Office (PRO-7) Regional Director Debold Sinas and then Cebu City Police Office Director Royina Garma to press charges against the mayor, which they filed before the Office of the Ombudsman-Visayas.

Nalzaro said his camp will work for the consolidation of the four charges, as these were filed in two separate branches of the Regional Trial Court here. (PNA)

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