20200610 Ressa
Maria Ressa, CEO and executive editor of online portal Rappler, showing the warrant of arrest order after posting bail at a court in Manila. File photo Image Credit: AFP

Manila: High-profile Philippine journalist Maria Ressa was convicted Monday in a cyber libel case that press freedom advocates have branded a ploy to silence critics of President Rodrigo Duterte.

The verdict was handed down in a Manila courtroom against Ressa, who heads the news site Rappler, and she will be allowed to post bail.

Here are some other notable confrontations:

'Shameless' Inquirer 

The Philippine Daily Inquirer is one of the nation's top publications and brands itself as delivering "balanced news, fearless views".

When Duterte launched his deadly crackdown on narcotics in 2016, the paper covered it extensively and published editorials sharply critical of the killings.

Duterte repeatedly attacked the paper in speeches - at one point branding the Inquirer and the nation's top broadcaster ABS-CBN as "shameless... those sons of [expletive] journalists".

Months later the paper's owners ended up in talks to sell to a powerful businessman and Duterte-backer, though the deal would later fall through.

ABS-CBN shutdown

The nation's top broadcaster ABS-CBN was forced off the air in May after years of threats by Duterte to shut down the network.

Early in his term Duterte accused the network of failing to air his 2016 campaign adverts and not returning the payments, and singled it out for ire in his speeches.

"I'm sorry. You're out. I will see to it that you're out," Duterte said in December.

The president's spokesman has said he is "completely neutral" on the legislature granting the network a new licence to operate.

Reporters 'not exempted' from killing

Duterte sparked outrage when he endorsed the killing of corrupt journalists as president-elect in 2016, saying "You're not exempted from assassination".

The National Union of Journalists of the Philippines described the comments as "appalling" in a nation that is one of the most dangerous for reporters.

One of the world's deadliest attacks against journalists took place in the Philippines in 2009, when 32 journalists were among 58 people killed by a warlord clan intent on stopping a rival's election challenge.

Wolf-whistle 

While still president-elect, Duterte wolf-whistled at a woman journalist during a nationally televised press conference, sparking criticism from rights groups and the press.

He interrupted a question from reporter Mariz Umali before whistling and breaking into a short serenade.

While Umali subsequently sought to play down the controversy, her husband, also a journalist, had words for Duterte.

"Catcalling my wife is wrong in so many levels," husband Raffy Tima wrote on Facebook.