I got this email last night from the National Union of Journalists of the Philippines. The NUJP was denouncing an attempt to shut down its website by hackers. Among press organizations in the country, the NUJP has been very vocal against media repression, especially on the unstoppable killing of journalists. Why its site was hacked is everybody’s guess. 1017? Maybe…

NUJP website shut down by hackers

The National Union of Journalists of the Philippines expresses concern over the shutting down of its website (www.nujp.org) today, March 1. The site could not be accessed practically the whole day Wednesday after somebody hacked into its database server and tried to delete or change files. According to the NUJP’s web host, the hacker or hackers also illegally made too many connections to the database that prevented other users or readers from accessing the site. (The site was up by late afternoon Wednesday.)

The website has been publishing statements, manifestos and updates condemning the latest crackdown by the government on the Philippine press. It also serves as a database of the numerous attacks and murders of journalists in the Philippines. Many journalists and citizens from around the world refer to the site for materials on press freedom in the Philippines.


In view of the attempts by the Arroyo administration to muzzle or intimidate the press through Proclamation 1017, which the NUJP deems inimical to press freedom, to civil liberties and to the public interest, preventing us from publishing our website is distressing, to say the least. This is no different from forcibly closing down a publication.

The government must stop trying to intimidate journalists. We urge our colleagues in the press to defy Proclamation 1017 and resist the efforts by this government to violate our basic freedoms.

National Union of Journalists of the Philippines