FEATURE-Philippine 'Avengers' battle disinformation before election

Philippine presidential candidate Ferdinand
Philippine presidential candidate Ferdinand "Bongbong" Marcos Jr., son of late dictator Ferdinand Marcos, gestures with a victory sign during a campaign rally in Lipa, Batangas province, Philippines, April 20, 2022. REUTERS/Eloisa Lopez · Eloisa Lopez / reuters

* Wave of disinformation on social media ahead of May 9 poll

* Church leaders, fact checkers fight disinformation

* Social media platforms have taken some measures

By Rina Chandran and Manuel Mogato

BANGKOK/MANILA, April 21 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - At St. Francis of Assisi church in Manila, as parishioners kneel and bow their heads in prayer at Sunday mass, the lector appeals for a safe, peaceful and honest presidential election.

The prayer - recited in Tagalog or English to a nation of some 85 million Catholics - also seeks deliverance from "dishonesty, lies and all distortion of truth".

The May 9 election to pick the nation's president, vice president, senators, and fill 300 lower house seats and 18,000 local posts, is seen as highly consequential, with the son of an ousted dictator, Ferdinand Marcos Jr, pitted against an incumbent vice president, Maria Leonor "Leni" Robredo.

For Angelique Mendoza, a 61-year-old retiree, it is only fitting that church leaders have joined the fight against disinformation, as citizens face a barrage of falsehoods on social media platforms, as they did before 2016's election.

"Some people are getting tired of priests telling us about the dangers of fake news. I am not, because it is their moral obligation to warn us of what is not good for our spirituality," she said after mass at St. Francis church on a recent Sunday.

"I don't mind hearing the priests warning us about fake news. As long as they do not mention any names, I still find them apolitical," she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

The word of the church carries enormous clout in the Philippines, where eight in 10 people are Catholics.

Its influence is not lost on Robredo, sole female candidate for president, who is trailing frontrunner https://www.pulseasia.ph Marcos and has enlisted the help of priests in her campaign.

"The Catholic Church has the machinery on the ground to fight disinformation," Robredo told reporters in Cebu city.

"But my call is for everyone, not only the Catholic Church. This is not only my problem as a candidate, but a problem for everyone: the elections will be based on lies if we don't do everything to stop disinformation," she said.

"The worst thing that can happen is not me losing, but the other candidate winning through disinformation."

ONLINE MISINFORMATION

Robredo's plea appears to have been heeded.

Media firms, universities, civil society groups, lawyers and church leaders have formed several fact-checking coalitions in an unprecedented effort to counter election disinformation.