Rubylita Garcia

Rubylita Garcia (ca. 1962 6 April 2014) was a Filipino host for a local radio talk show on channel dwAD and a journalist for the daily tabloid Remate in Bacoor, Philippines. She reported on corruption in the Philippines.[1] She was murdered in 2014.

Rubylita Garcia
Bornca. 1962
Manila, Philippines
DiedApril 6, 2014 (aged 5152)
Bacoor, Cavite, Philippines
Cause of deathGunshot wound
Resting placeTrinity Garden, Bacoor City
NationalityFilipino
OccupationRadio Host, Reporter, Journalist
EmployerRemate, dwAD
Children1

Personal

Rubylita Garcia was a 52-year-old widow who had one son, Tristan, and a granddaughter.[1][2] She was buried in Trinity Garden in her hometown of Bacoor City after a Mass at the St. Michael Church.[3]

Career

Garcia was a reporter for over 25 years.[4] She was an investigative journalist reporting for Remate, the Pilipino Times, and also worked for the radio station dwAD in Cavite province.[1][5] Garcia was president of a group of journalists, which was called the Confederation of Active Media Practitioners Organization, in the area of Calabarzon. She was also a member of the National Press Club (Philippines).[2][5][6]

Death

Manila
Bacoor City
Bacoor City is in the Philippines shown here relative to the capital Manila.

She was gunned down by two men in front of her ten-year-old granddaughter, son, and sister-in-law in her home in Bacoor City.[1] Before she died, she said that the local police chief was the only one who wanted her dead, no conviction has been made however, only a temporary relief of duty.[2][7][8] She died on the way to the hospital and her family members were not physically harmed.[9]

The Philippine National Police formed a special investigation task force, but no one was captured.[9][10] One of the suspects was witnessed to be about 6 foot tall, in his thirties, with a tattoo of a cross on his neck and a tattoo on his arm.[1][9][10][11] A man was arrested during a busy bust operation in Cavite City, but further examination of the suspect from a witness declared that this was not one of the men who murdered Garcia.[10] No further reports have been made to the capture of these gunmen.

Context

From 2001 to 2014, 115 reported media workers have been killed in the Philippines.[12] 48 of these were work-related murders while only 36 were filed in court.[12] Under Philippines President Benigno Aquino III's administration there have been 27 media killings from 2010 to 2014, 11 were work related while 16 were non-work related.[12] Out of the 11 work related murders, Garcia was the only person who was murdered in 2014 while 6 people were murdered in 2013.[12] The Philippines is ranked the 3rd worst country for journalists in CPJ's impunity index.[9]

Impact

Irina Bokova, who is the director-general of UNESCO, said, "I condemn the murder of Rubylita Garcia. It is essential that the authorities of the Philippines do all they can to identify and bring to trial those responsible for this cowardly crime. Murderers cannot be allowed to set limits to journalists’ freedom of expression or on citizens’ rights to information."[13]

The National Press Club along with many other of the Philippines’ largest media organizations, mourned Garcia's death.[8] Garcia's death added to the journalistic turmoil in the Philippines, which resulted in many media practitioners having increased dissatisfaction and disappointment with the Aquino government's ability to rectify and prevent media killings.[1]

Reactions

Bacoor's Mayor, Strike B. Revilla, started a P 50,000 reward for anyone who would solve the case of Garcia's murder.[8] Later, the P 50,000 reward was raised to P 100,000 and was then raised again to P 150,000 by Alab ng Mamamahayag (ALAM). This group rallied at the Cavite police headquarters, protesting their concerns of how long it was taking to investigate Garcia's case.[4][10] Funeral marchers carrying Garcia's casket during “A Walk For Justice” adopted the slogan “Justice For Ruby Garcia” and had it printed on their T-shirts which they wore while marching.[3]

gollark: ... also array literals, bee their bad docs.
gollark: Please also give me write access to the repo.
gollark: Oh, right, array indexing.
gollark: ```python# parsita-based pseudocode syntax parserfrom stmt import *from parsita import *from parsita.util import constantdef compose(f, g): return lambda x: f(g(x))def map_expr(x): start, end = x if end == "": return start return Op([start, end[1]], end[0])def map_unop_expr(x): return Op(x[1], x[0])def aliases(name, aliases): p = lit(name) for alias in aliases: p |= (lit(alias) > (lambda _: name)) return pclass ExprParser(TextParsers): ε = lit("") IntLit = reg("\-?[0-9]+") > compose(IntLit, int) StrLit = "'" >> reg("[^']*") << "'" > StrLit # TODO escapes (not in "spec" but could be needed) FloatLit = reg("\-?[0-9]+\.[0-9]+") > compose(FloatLit, float) Identifier = reg("[a-zA-Z_]+[a-zA-Z_0-9]*") > Var BracketedExpr = "(" >> Expr << ")" UnaryOperator = lit("NOT") Start = FloatLit | StrLit | IntLit | BracketedExpr | (UnaryOperator & Expr > map_unop_expr) | Identifier # avoid left recursion problems by not doing left recursion # AQA pseudocode does not appear to have a notion of "operator precedence", simplifying parsing logic nicely BinaryOperator = aliases("≤", ["<="]) | aliases("≠", ["!="]) | aliases("≥", [">="]) | lit("DIV") | lit("MOD") | lit("AND") | lit("OR") | reg("[+/*\-=<>]") End = (BinaryOperator & Expr) | ε Expr = (Start & End) > map_exprparse = ExprParser.Expr.parsex = parse("1+2+3 != 6 AND NOT 4 AND x + y")if isinstance(x, Failure): print(x.message)else: print(x.value)```
gollark: <@332271551481118732> Expression parsing is done, I think.

See also

References

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