MANILA, Philippines — A Philippine appeals court reversed a regulator's 2018 order to shut down a prominent news outlet in a decision made public Friday, marking a legal victory for journalists who angered former President Rodrigo Duterte by reporting critically on his deadly crackdown on illegal drugs and alarming human rights record.
The Court of Appeals ordered the Securities and Exchange Commission to restore the certificates of incorporation of Rappler, an online news outfit founded by 2021 Nobel peace prize co-winner Maria Ressa, in a decision issued July 23.
It wasn't immediately clear if the SEC will appeal the ruling.
''It's a vindication,'' Rappler said in a statement. ''It's a fact that the Duterte government used the SEC order to unleash its power to further harass us, our employees, our stakeholders and our communities.''
Rappler said it's still facing two other legal cases: a cyber-libel conviction that Ressa is appealing to the Supreme Court and a case pending in another Philippine court in which the outlet is accused of violating the ''Anti-Dummy Law,'' which prohibits Philippines nationals from acting as proxies for noncitizens to evade legal requirements.
Rappler has continued to operate during its legal fight, despite the closure order.
Rappler was accused of violating a constitutional ban on foreign investments in local media agencies when it received funds through financial papers called Philippine depository receipts in 2015 from the Omidyar Network, a philanthropic organization backed by eBay founder Pierre Omidyar. The government alleged that the funding gave Omidyar some control over Rappler.
Rappler denied Omidyar wielded any control over it through the financial receipts, which Omidyar later donated to the online outfit's employees.