Jose Jaime Llavore Espina, also known as Nonoy Espina
March 8, 1962-July 7, 2021
Veteran Journo and Press Freedom Hero
In the statement of the National Union of Journalists of the
Philippines, Jose Jaime Llavore “Nonoy” Espina was hailed as the press freedom
hero worthy of admiration and emulation. From the Marcos dictatorship until the
Duterte administration, he consistently served the Filipino people by upholding
the truth.
Nonoy Espina had been a journalist from high school to
college, editing University of the Philippines Visayas' Pagbutlak. He majored
in humanities in UP Visayas Iloilo, where he was a member of the Silak
Fraternity.
A man of many talents, he drew, he danced, he composed,
played the piano and sang, mostly jazz and blues, in a distinct gravelly voice. He loved
classical music and the blues.
He wore many hats, but he was first and foremost a
journalist.
He was member of community media group Correspondents,
Broadcasters and Reporters Association—Action News Service, or COBRA-ANS, which
was part of the “mosquito press” during the Marcos dictatorship.
He was also an editor of the local Courier, served as a
correspondent of the defunct Today Newspaper and worked for a time in the
Lifestyle magazine of The Manila Standard. He became an editor of the online
news outfits Inquirer.net and InterAksyon. He sat as managing editor of the
Dateline Philippines, one of the early independent online news portals.
Nonoy preferred to mostly practice his journalism in Negros
Occidental, his home province.
Nonoy also helped colleagues deal with the traumas of the
profession. He fought hard for press freedom but always liked to stress its
natural link to all freedoms for all citizens and human rights.
Espina was also among the first responders at the Ampatuan
Massacre in Maguindanao in 2009. Writer Joel Pablo Salud recalls the lesson he
learned from Nonoy as they covered this unfortunate event: always be wary of
the narrative of those in power. Salud shares, “in the course of our coverage
of the Ampatuan massacre, the clan which perpetrated the slaughter of 58
people, more than 30 of whom were journalists, began changing their image in
the eyes of the media. They started referring to themselves as ‘freedom
fighters,’ which at the onset lured some members of the local press to believe
their claims. Nonoy saw through the lies and began raising the absurdity of
that statement. Insofar as the 200 or so hoodlums involved in the mass
slaughter were concerned, the clan needed to ‘elevate’ their status to ‘revolutionaries’
in order to garner sympathy from the public.”
The College Editors Guild of the Philippines honored Nonoy
with the Marcelo H. Del Pilar Award, the highest honor that the organization
gives its alumni. In its citation, CEGP called Nonoy “without doubt, a leading
force in the defense of press freedom and freedom of expression in the country
today.”
Like many journalists, he was materially poor. But in his
devotion to the profession and our people he was, as Danny Fabella sang, hindi
pangkaraniwang tao.
To his last breath, he waved that banner. Patriot,
journalist, loving husband, father, and brother, he will not be forgotten. Nonoy
is survived by his wife, Leny Rojo Espina, his children Mayumi Liwayway Rojo
Espina and Daki Ojor Espina.
Early this year (2021), Nonoy had just turned over the NUJP
chairmanship to the new set of officers, but even amid health problems he
shepherded the union through challenging times for the Philippine press. Nonoy
has always said, “we exercise press freedom not because we are allowed to. We
exercise freedom because we insist on being free."
by Beverly Wico Siy
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