<p>Philippine Nobel Prize winner Maria Ressa and her online media company Rappler were on Wednesday acquitted of all four charges of tax evasion filed against her, a court said.</p>.<p>Ressa, who won the Nobel along with Russian journalist Dmitry Muratov in 2021, still faces three other criminal cases, including a cyber libel conviction now under appeal that could mean nearly seven years in prison.</p>.<p>"Today, facts win. Truth wins," a defiant Ressa told reporters outside the Manila courtroom shortly after the court ruled on government charges that she and Rappler dodged taxes in a 2015 bond sale to foreign investors.</p>.<p>"These charges were politically motivated," Ressa said Wednesday. "We were able to prove that Rappler is not a tax evader."</p>.<p>The 59-year-old has been battling a series of cases that media advocates say were filed due to her vocal criticism of former president Rodrigo Duterte and his drug war, which claimed thousands of lives.</p>.<p>Ressa and Muratov were awarded the 2021 Nobel for their efforts to "safeguard freedom of expression".</p>.<p>Asked what the tax court ruling meant, Ressa said: "Hope. That's what it provides."</p>.<p>Despite the ruling, the future of Rappler, which Ressa founded about a decade ago, remains uncertain.</p>.<p>It is still fighting a Philippine Securities and Exchange Commission order to close it for allegedly violating a constitutional ban on foreign ownership in media.</p>.<p>The news organisation, which remains operational, is accused of allowing foreigners to take control of its website through its parent company Rappler Holdings' issuance of "depositary receipts".</p>.<p>Under the constitution, investment in media is reserved for Filipinos or Filipino-controlled entities.</p>.<p>The case springs from a 2015 investment by the US-based Omidyar Network, established by eBay founder Pierre Omidyar.</p>.<p>Omidyar Network later transferred its Rappler investment to the site's local managers to stave off efforts by Duterte to shut it down.</p>.<p>Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos said in September he would not interfere in Ressa's cases, citing the separation of powers between the executive and judicial branches of government.</p>.<p>Shortly after Marcos took office last year, Ressa lost an appeal against a 2020 conviction for cyber libel.</p>.<p>Trouble for Ressa and Rappler started in 2016, when Duterte came to power and launched a drug war in which more than 6,200 people died in police anti-narcotics operations, official data shows.</p>.<p>Rights groups estimate tens of thousands were killed.</p>.<p>Rappler was among the domestic and foreign media outlets that published shocking images of the killings and questioned the crackdown's legal basis.</p>.<p>Local broadcaster ABS-CBN -- also critical of Duterte -- lost its free-to-air licence, while Ressa and Rappler endured what press freedom advocates say was a grinding series of criminal charges, probes and online attacks.</p>.<p>Duterte's government said previously it had nothing to do with any of the cases against Ressa.</p>
<p>Philippine Nobel Prize winner Maria Ressa and her online media company Rappler were on Wednesday acquitted of all four charges of tax evasion filed against her, a court said.</p>.<p>Ressa, who won the Nobel along with Russian journalist Dmitry Muratov in 2021, still faces three other criminal cases, including a cyber libel conviction now under appeal that could mean nearly seven years in prison.</p>.<p>"Today, facts win. Truth wins," a defiant Ressa told reporters outside the Manila courtroom shortly after the court ruled on government charges that she and Rappler dodged taxes in a 2015 bond sale to foreign investors.</p>.<p>"These charges were politically motivated," Ressa said Wednesday. "We were able to prove that Rappler is not a tax evader."</p>.<p>The 59-year-old has been battling a series of cases that media advocates say were filed due to her vocal criticism of former president Rodrigo Duterte and his drug war, which claimed thousands of lives.</p>.<p>Ressa and Muratov were awarded the 2021 Nobel for their efforts to "safeguard freedom of expression".</p>.<p>Asked what the tax court ruling meant, Ressa said: "Hope. That's what it provides."</p>.<p>Despite the ruling, the future of Rappler, which Ressa founded about a decade ago, remains uncertain.</p>.<p>It is still fighting a Philippine Securities and Exchange Commission order to close it for allegedly violating a constitutional ban on foreign ownership in media.</p>.<p>The news organisation, which remains operational, is accused of allowing foreigners to take control of its website through its parent company Rappler Holdings' issuance of "depositary receipts".</p>.<p>Under the constitution, investment in media is reserved for Filipinos or Filipino-controlled entities.</p>.<p>The case springs from a 2015 investment by the US-based Omidyar Network, established by eBay founder Pierre Omidyar.</p>.<p>Omidyar Network later transferred its Rappler investment to the site's local managers to stave off efforts by Duterte to shut it down.</p>.<p>Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos said in September he would not interfere in Ressa's cases, citing the separation of powers between the executive and judicial branches of government.</p>.<p>Shortly after Marcos took office last year, Ressa lost an appeal against a 2020 conviction for cyber libel.</p>.<p>Trouble for Ressa and Rappler started in 2016, when Duterte came to power and launched a drug war in which more than 6,200 people died in police anti-narcotics operations, official data shows.</p>.<p>Rights groups estimate tens of thousands were killed.</p>.<p>Rappler was among the domestic and foreign media outlets that published shocking images of the killings and questioned the crackdown's legal basis.</p>.<p>Local broadcaster ABS-CBN -- also critical of Duterte -- lost its free-to-air licence, while Ressa and Rappler endured what press freedom advocates say was a grinding series of criminal charges, probes and online attacks.</p>.<p>Duterte's government said previously it had nothing to do with any of the cases against Ressa.</p>