Washington Post AI podcast sparks accuracy concerns Pope warns Italian intelligence against smearing journalists Trial of Meydan TV journalists opens in Baku China charges journalist Du Bin under public order offense RT India deletes video of Shahbaz Sharif waiting to meet Putin Deepfakes fuel spread of health misinformation online EU fines X 120 million euros for deceptive blue check practices Italy media leaders weigh sale of Gedi assets amid newsroom unrest Advocacy rises for jailed Myanmar photojournalist Sai Zaw India warns VPNs and platforms to block data leak sites Washington Post AI podcast sparks accuracy concerns Pope warns Italian intelligence against smearing journalists Trial of Meydan TV journalists opens in Baku China charges journalist Du Bin under public order offense RT India deletes video of Shahbaz Sharif waiting to meet Putin Deepfakes fuel spread of health misinformation online EU fines X 120 million euros for deceptive blue check practices Italy media leaders weigh sale of Gedi assets amid newsroom unrest Advocacy rises for jailed Myanmar photojournalist Sai Zaw India warns VPNs and platforms to block data leak sites
Logo
Janu
World

Cameron to testify at press ethics inquiry

 JournalismPakistan.com |  Published 13 years ago

Join our WhatsApp channel

Cameron to testify at press ethics inquiry

LONDON: British Prime Minister David Cameron is to appear next week before an inquiry into press ethics sparked by the phone-hacking scandal at Rupert Murdoch’s newspapers.

Cameron, whose government has been under fire over a series of revelations about its closeness to Murdoch’s media empire, will give evidence on June 14, according to a witness list published on the Leveson Inquiry website.

His testimony is scheduled to take up a full six-and-a-half-hour day of the televised inquiry at London’s Royal Courts of Justice, which is set to hear from several political heavyweights during the week.

Finance Minister George Osborne is to testify on Monday, as will former Prime Minister Gordon Brown, according to the list published Friday.

Another ex-premier, John Major, will appear Tuesday along with opposition Labor leader Ed Miliband, while Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg and Scottish First Mminister Alex Salmond are scheduled for Wednesday.
The prime minister is likely to face questions about his friendship with former top Murdoch aide Rebekah Brooks, who has been arrested over the phone-hacking scandal and charged with conspiracy to obstruct justice.

He may also be asked about his former media chief Andy Coulson, an ex-editor of Murdoch’s News of the World newspaper, who has been charged with perjury in a case relating to a story in the paper.

Coulson was separately arrested last year on suspicion of phone hacking and corruption.

Critics cried foul over yet another link with Murdoch firms after aides to the culture minister, Jeremy Hunt, were shown to have leaked information to Murdoch’s News Corp., but the prime minister has stood by him.

An adviser to Hunt was forced to resign in April over the leaks, which took place during the time when Hunt was tasked with judging whether News Corp.’s bid for control of lucrative pay-TV firm BSkyB could go ahead.

Hunt was meant to be impartial in judging the bid, eventually abandoned last year as the phone-hacking scandal at Murdoch’s newspapers escalated.

Cameron has faced questions over his choice of Hunt to scrutinize the bid, given the culture minister had already expressed enthusiastic support for it.

But the prime minister has insisted Hunt acted “properly” throughout, and has refused to order an investigation into whether he broke the ministerial code of conduct.
Hunt was also embarrassed last month by the inquiry’s release of light-hearted text messages between him and a lobbyist for Murdoch’s News Corporation, in which he called lobbyist Fred Michel “mon ami” and “daddy”.

Cameron launched the Leveson Inquiry, led by judge Brian Leveson, in July 2011 to examine British press ethics in reaction to the phone-hacking scandal at the News of the World, which led to the paper’s closure.

But in recent weeks the government itself has also appeared to be on trial, even as the Conservative-led coalition struggles to recover from several budget blunders and news that Britain is back in recession.

More than 40 people have been arrested over the phone-hacking scandal, which involved claims of illegal access to voicemails and subsequent attempts to hide evidence.

Police are also investigating accusations of inappropriate payments to public officials.- AFP
 

Read Next

Trial of Meydan TV journalists opens in Baku

Trial of Meydan TV journalists opens in Baku

 December 13, 2025: Trial proceedings against Meydan TV journalists have opened in Baku, raising concerns among press freedom groups about pressure on independent and foreign-funded media outlets.

Journalist deaths rise sharply in 2025, Gaza leads toll

Journalist deaths rise sharply in 2025, Gaza leads toll

 December 09, 2025: The 2025 report from Reporters Without Borders records 67 journalists killed worldwide, nearly half in Gaza, highlighting escalating risks for reporters in war zones, crime-ridden regions, and authoritarian states.

Online abuse of women journalists hits new global high

Online abuse of women journalists hits new global high

 December 09, 2025: A new UN Women report finds 70 percent of women journalists and activists worldwide face online violence, with 42 percent reporting offline harm linked to digital attacks, raising serious press freedom concerns.

Newsroom
Washington Post AI podcast sparks accuracy concerns

Washington Post AI podcast sparks accuracy concerns

 December 13, 2025 Washington Post launches an AI-personalized podcast that permits user customization but faces staff and industry criticism over accuracy mistakes and journalistic integrity in early rollout.


China charges journalist Du Bin under public order offense

China charges journalist Du Bin under public order offense

 December 13, 2025 China has formally charged veteran journalist and documentary maker Du Bin with picking quarrels and provoking trouble, a public order offense critics say is used to silence media.


Media bodies condemn ad ban on Dawn TV and radio

Media bodies condemn ad ban on Dawn TV and radio

 December 13, 2025 Pakistani media bodies have condemned the government’s unannounced ban on advertisements to Dawn Media Group’s TV and radio outlets, calling it an attack on press freedom.


RT India deletes video of Shahbaz Sharif waiting to meet Putin

RT India deletes video of Shahbaz Sharif waiting to meet Putin

 December 13, 2025 RT India deletes a viral video showing Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif allegedly waiting for Russian President Vladimir Putin, calling it a misrepresentation of events.


Deepfakes fuel spread of health misinformation online

Deepfakes fuel spread of health misinformation online

 December 13, 2025 Deepfake videos impersonating doctors are spreading health misinformation online, raising urgent concerns for public health, social media platforms, and newsroom verification efforts.


Popular Stories