![]() ![]() He said the owners and officers of ABS-CBN and ABC “areĮngaged in subversive activities against the government” and are “participants Marcos linked the networks to a conspiracy with theĬommunist party. Channel 5 and its sister TV stations in the cities of Davao and Cebu.sister radio stations in Davao City, Cebu City, Laoag City and Dagupan City.1-A, ordering the military to specifically sequester facilities of ABS-CBN Broadcasting Corporation and Associated Broadcasting Corporation. On September 28, Marcos issued Letter of Instruction No. “n order to prevent the use of privately owned newspapers, magazines, radio and television facilities and all other media of communications, for propaganda purposes against the government and its duly constituted authorities or for any purpose that tends to undermine the faith and confidence of the people in our government and aggravate the present national emergency, you are hereby ordered forthwith to take over and control or cause the taking over and control of all….for the duration of the present national emergency or until otherwise ordered by me or by my duly designated representative.” Marcos justified the order by saying it was done to prevent the use of privately-owned mass media against the government. 1, authorizing the military to take over the assets of major media outlets nationwide. On September 22, 1972, Marcos issued Letter of Instruction No. "So Windradyne is seen as a law man because all he was doing was enforcing Wiradjuri law, and the white man didn't take too kindly to that I suppose.Here were the ways Marcos attacked press freedom during his dictatorship: 1. "They said they were enforcing their law, but the Wiradjuri were also enforcing their own law because they never surrendered their sovereignty," he said. Windradyne and guerrilla warfareĭuring this period, Aboriginal warrior Windradyne was leading Wiradjuri warriors in guerrilla warfare against the European settlers.īathurst-based Wiradjuri elder Dinawan Dyirribang, who is descended from Windradyne, said for the Aboriginal people it was warfare because martial law was an English concept that was never communicated to the Wiradjuri peoples. In another massacre during the period of martial law, Wiradjuri peoples who were camped on the escarpment at Bells Falls Gorge were encircled by soldiers and given the option of jumping into the falls or facing gunfire. Unaware of the dangers of martial law, a group of Wiradjuri people approached a party of soldiers who were offering food. Mr Elder's book details other massacres including in Billywillinga about 20km north-west of Bathurst. Upon their return, the white farmer, who misunderstood the situation, gathered neighbours to slaughter an unreported number of "thieving blacks". Under the belief that the potatoes were growing on their tribal lands, the Wiradjuri people felt they had a customary right to the produce. In early March 1824, a farmer showed a group of Wiradjuri people how to cook potatoes in what has become known as the Potato Field Incident. The Potato Field Incident and other massacres ![]() The proclamation of martial law by governor Thomas Brisbane ordered any retaliatory bloodshed be stopped by any means necessary, with the use of firearms against the Wiradjuri in the area west of Mount York on the Great Dividing Range.Īuthor Bruce Elder, who wrote Blood on the Wattle, which details the massacres and mistreatment of Aboriginal Australians since 1788, said martial law was "used to justify every atrocity and every massacre". With their traditional hunting grounds destroyed, the Wiradjuri people became increasingly involved in skirmishes with white farmers. A history of bloodshedīetween 18, the white population increased tenfold in the Bathurst region, from 114 to 1,267. Wiradjuri elders and others yesterday marked the anniversary with an inaugural ceremony at Bathurst's Bicentennial Peace Park. Martial law was declared across the Bathurst region on August 14, 1824, leading to a sharp rise in conflict between settler society and the Wiradjuri peoples. A bloody part of Australian history has been examined at Bathurst in central NSW on the 193rd anniversary of its declaration of martial law. ![]()
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