Inquirer, BusinessMirror, and PCIJ win JVOAEJ top prizes
Newspapers BusinessMirror and the Philippine Daily Inquirer and the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism won the top awards in the 17th Jaime V. Ongpin Awards for Excellence in Journalism (JVOAEJ) for works published in 2005 at ceremonies held at the AIM Conference Center Manila on June 29.
As administrator of the awards since it was launched in 1990, the Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility (CMFR) introduced an innovation for this yearâs competition. Reports published by daily newspapers were judged separately from those published by non-dailies. Thus, there are two sets of first, second and third prizes for the investigative and explanatory categories.
The first prize winners of the daily and non-daily division of the investigative and the explanatory category receive a cash prize of P70,000 each and a plaque.
The first prize of the daily division of the investigative category went to âTracing the trail of the tapeâ by Fe Zamora and Gerry Lirio of the Philippine Daily Inquirer which was published on September 17-18, 2005. In the non-daily division of the same category, the first prize went to âRunning on taxpayersâ moneyâ by Luz Rimban of the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism published in i Report in September of last year.
CMFR in consultation with the Canadian Embassy announced that the Marshall McLuhan Prize will go to the first prize winner of the daily division. The Marshall McLuhan Prize is a travel study tour of Canada given to the first prize winner of the investigative category. This is the 10th year that the Canadian Embassy has given out Mashall McLuhan Prize in the JVOAEJ.
Luz Rimban also took the third prize of the investigative categoryâs non-daily division for her article âMajor players elude governmentâs anti-logging drive in Auroraâ The article was published in BusinessWorld, Cebu Daily News, Malaya, Philippine Daily Inquirer and Sun.Star Daily on January 31-February 1, 2005.
For also winning the third prize, Rimban takes home a cash prize of P20,000 and a plaque.
âCAP: From pre-needâs poster boy to whipping boyâ by Daxim L. Lucas and Elizabeth L. Sanchez published in the Philippine Daily Inquirer on September 19-21, 2005 won second prize in the daily division. In the non-daily division, âCheats Inc.â by Miriam Grace A. Go of Newsbreak on September 12, 2005 won second prize.
They each received a cash prize of P40,000 and a plaque.
The third prize winner in the daily division of the investigative category went to âBorder dispute leaves Dumagats in a quandaryâ by Fritz Dacpano published in The Manila Times on April 25-26, 2005.
She received a cash prize of P20,000 and a plaque.
In the daily division of the explanatory category, BusinessMirror took the first prize for its report âConfrontation to cooperation? Labor-management relations evolve in globalization eraâ written by Dave Llorito and published on November 2, 2005 while PCIJ took the top prize in the non-daily division with âFocus on Filipino youth: Perils of generation sexâ by Cheryl Chan published in i Report September 2005 issue.
CMFR in consultation with the Australian Embassy decided that the Ambassadorâs award, a travel grant to Australia, would go to the first prize winner of the daily division. This is the fourth time that the Australian Embassy is awarding the Ambassadorâs Award in the JVOAEJ.
âElectronic ears listen with bugs and tapsâ by Fil V. Elefante published in The Manila Times on June 27-29, 2005 won second prize in the daily division and âMama canât eatâ by Vinia M. Datinguinoo of PCIJ published in the January-March 2005 issue of the i Report took the second prize in the non-daily division.
They each received a cash prize of P40,000 and a plaque.
The third prize winners in the explanatory category are âThe economics of corruptionâ written by DâLaarni A. Ortiz, Larissa Josephine C. Villa, Roulee Jane F. Calayag, Ehden Llave-Pelaez and edited by Noel G. Reyes which was published in BusinessWorld on July 19, 2005 (daily division) and âBataan nuke power plant: Still unused, still paying for itâ by Lidy Nacpil and Mae Buenaventura published in the Philippine Graphic on March 14, 2005 (non-daily division).
The third prize winners in both division received a cash prize of P20,000 and a plaque.
The first awards were given in 1990 to honor the late Jaime V. Ongpin, who was secretary of finance during the Aquino administration. A press freedom advocate, Ongpin was involved in the struggle against the Marcos dictatorship and was instrumental in harnessing public support for the restoration of democracy in the Philippines.
This year, the JVOAEJ is sponsored by The Asia Foundation with support from the United States Agency for International Development.
The finalists of the 17th JVOAEJ are:
Investigative Category
Daily Division
Bailout costs too much for deposit insurer
Norman P. Aquino
BusinessWorld
November 29-December 1, 2005
Palawanâs gas pains
Jofelle P. Tesorio
Philippine Daily Inquirer
January 13, 2005
Non-Daily Division
So young and so trapo
Avigail Olarte
Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism
Published in i Report
September 2005
Guns and gold
Gemma B. Bagayaua
Newsbreak
December 5, 19, 2005 and January 30, 2006
For land and wages
Half a century of peasant struggle at Hacienda Luisita
Dabet Castañeda
Bulatlat.com
Published in Philippine Graphic on January 3-10, 17, 2005
Explanatory Category
Daily Division
Philippine economic progress since 1988
The âgood old daysâ
John Mangun
BusinessMirror
December 1-3, 2005
Graduating class: Education, labor mismatch
Norman P. Aquino
BusinessWorld
March 10, 2005
Non-Daily Division
Mutants on your plate
Alan C. Robles
Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism
Published in i Report
January-March 2005
Broken promises
Lala Rimando, Cathy Rose Garcia and Elena Torrijos
Newsbreak
January 31, 2005
Trained to care
Avigail Olarte
Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism
Published in i Report
January-March 2005