A Zelo Street regular has been in
touch to register concern about the apparently over-zealous editing used by the
Mirror to censor inconvenient views,
even from its own star columnists, on the subject of press regulation. Parent
company Trinity Mirror has signed up to the Independent Press Standards
Organisation (IPSO), which, as any fule kno, is a reheated version of the
disgraced PCC.
Don't mention this man at the Mirror
However, and here we have a significantly sized however,
regular Sunday pundit John Prescott makes no secret of his support for the
recommendations made in the Leveson report, most of which IPSO fails, as it
(for instance) pretends to be independent when it is not. Prezza touched on the
subject in his column yesterday, but it
has been edited out of the online version.
So what did he say? Under the headline “Why justice is only open to the rich”, he told “There are many who want us to forget the
past now the phone hacking trial has ended. But not the thousands of victims,
whose privacy was violated in the chase for exclusives by Andy Coulson and his
News of the World cronies”.
“Yes, several senior
Murdoch journalists have been convicted. But ordinary people wronged by
newspapers will still struggle to get compensation or an apology – unless they
are able to hire a lawyer to force papers to pay up, risking vast legal costs
and in some cases their homes”.
“For them the phone
hacking trial changes nothing. Most people have not got the time or the money
to ask for an apology or take newspapers to court. To deal with complaints in
future, some newspaper owners have set up the Independent Press Standards
Organisation”.
“It’s a new name for
the discredited press poodle, the PCC, which accepted there was only ‘one rogue
reporter’ at the News of the World – because that’s what it was told by the
Murdoch press. But IPSO is not requiring members to offer low-cost legal
arbitration to settle readers’ claims, one of Leveson’s main recommendations”.
“For papers, the rule for settling claims is the same rule as for who can
stay at the Ritz: anyone can – if they can afford it”.
“In the next few
weeks, an alternative arbitration service will be announced. It is being set up
by an internationally-recognised legal body and some of the most passionate believers
in freedom of speech. I hope all papers let readers use it. Then Leveson really
would have achieved something. Coulson’s
18 month jail term is the start of change – not the end of it”.
Why the Mirror,
which has slavishly signed up to IPSO, should censor a columnist who exposes
that body as a sham continuation of the PCC, is not a mystery.
1 comment:
IPSO facto - nothing changes.
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