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Bulletins Story:
COURT OF APPEAL HOLDS THE LINE AGAINST "BIG BROTHER" ON
INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS: GALLOWAY v THE TELEGRAPH
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Date:
26.01.2006
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To some the all seeing eye of the media is akin to the chilling
Orwell creation, Big Brother. With Rupert Murdoch being voted in a
Radio 4 poll as more powerful than the Prime Minister and the
Chancellor of the Exchequer, even potent and media savvy
politicians like George Galloway occasionally need the protection
of the law when our "Big Brother" press pass judgment on him.
The problem posed by the so called "responsible journalism"
defence created by the House of Lords in the seminal case of
Reynolds v Times is that once that defence has been
established by a publisher (such as a newspaper) the right of the
defamed individual to restore his reputation is lost. In
Loutchansky v Times Newspapers, Mr Loutchansky
was refused permission even to seek a declaration of falsity in the
face of a Reynolds defence to his libel action, a decision
which confirmed the absolute loss by the individual of the right to
vindication if the responsible journalism defence succeeds. The key
issue in the Galloway case is the extent to which the courts will
deprive the individual of his or her right to a reputation in order
to uphold the competing right of free speech.
George Galloway successfully sued The
Telegraph over articles published in 2003 which were
based on documents found in Baghdad which indicated that Mr
Galloway had received over $300,000 from the former Iraqi regime
under the Oil-For-Food programme. The trial judge (Mr Justice Eady)
rejected the defence of fair comment because the articles made
allegations of fact against Mr Galloway which could not be defended
as fair comment. He rejected the Reynolds responsible
journalism defence because The Telegraph
had not only failed to put all the allegations to Mr Galloway but
had substantially embellished them. He went on to award Mr Galloway
£150,000 in damages.
The Telegraph's appeal against the
rejection of both of its defences, and the award of £150,000, has
today been dismissed. The judgment of the court was given by the
Master of the Rolls (Sir Anthony Clarke) who said:
"It appears to us that the newspaper was not merely
reporting what the Baghdad documents said, but that, as the judge
held, it both adopted and embellished them. It was alleging that Mr
Galloway took money from the Iraqi Oil-For-Food programme for
personal gain. That was not a mere repeat of the documents, which
did not, or did not clearly, make such an allegation. We agree with
the judge that, although there were some references to allegations,
the thrust of the allegations was that The Daily
Telegraph was saying that Mr Galloway took money to line
his own pocket. In all the circumstances, we asked whether the
newspaper adopted and embellished statements in the Baghdad
documents in the affirmative."
The Court of Appeal also considered whether the principles in
the House of Lords judgment in Reynolds were consistent
with the relevant Strasbourg jurisdiction, and also whether they
were consistent with the competing rights set out in Article 8 (the
right to respect for private and family life) and Article 10
(freedom of expression). Citing the judgment of the European Court
in Cumpana and Mazare v Romania on the issue of striking a
balance between those articles, Sir Antony Clarke MR not only
stressed the importance of this balance, but also confirmed that
the right to reputation was one of those rights enshrined in
Article 8:
"the crucial paragraph in that judgment ... stresses the
importance of the national courts striking a fair balance between
the protection of freedom of expression enshrined in Article 10 and
the protection of a person's reputation enshrined in Article 8 as
an aspect of private life."
Article 10 itself states that freedom of expression is subject
to certain restrictions. One of those expressly provided for is the
protection of reputation. As Lord Nicholls said in
Reynolds, if the reputation of public figures is
unjustifiably damaged, then not only are they unfairly the losers,
so is society as a whole. It is therefore vital that the courts
only deprive an individual of their Article 8 rights when
journalists have demonstrated a high degree of responsibility in
publishing defamatory material which they are unable to prove, even
on a mere balance of probabilities, is true.
Jonathan Coad
Defamation & Privacy
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