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Bulletins Story:
THE CHAIRMAN OF THE PCC COMMENTS ON THE ISSUE OF 'DUE
PROMINENCE' FOR CORRECTIONS
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Date: 18.06.2003
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The Press Complaints Commission issues a Code of Practice
which has in its first paragraph a stipulation as to 'Accuracy'. It
provides as follows:
'1. Newspapers and periodicals should take care not to publish
inaccurate, misleading or distorted material including
pictures.
2. Whenever it is recognised that a significant inaccuracy,
misleading statement or distorted report has been published, it
should be corrected promptly and with due prominence.
3. An apology must be published whenever appropriate.'
The NUJ Code has a similar provision:
'4. A journalist shall rectify promptly any harmful
inaccuracies, ensure that corrections and apologies receive due
prominence...'
Any lawyer who acts for claimants against newspapers will know
the vigour with which newspapers generally resist any suggestion
that the prominence of the retraction and/or apology has anything
like the prominence of the offending article.
In particular, newspapers vigorously resist any suggestion that
a front page apology/retraction should result from a front page
transgression. A front page apology can sometimes be achieved, but
it is normally necessary to threaten the newspaper with the expense
of libel proceedings in addition to reminding them of their PCC
Code obligations in order to do so.
It is probably too much to hope that this will all change as a
result even of some unequivocal statements made by the PCC Chairman
Sir Christopher Meyer to the Culture Media and Sport Committee on
21 May. Rosemary McKenna MP took Sir Christopher to task saying
that one witness that she had spoken to had said: 'We won our case
but we felt we lost, because the retraction and apology was so
poor, and buried.'
Sir Christopher replied that one of the messages he was
communicating to the press was 'that when they do apologise or a
correction has to be published or a negative adjudication comes
out, these things should be at least as prominent as the original
transgression.'
Pressed on this subject, Sir Christopher repeated his
assertion:
'Yes, otherwise it is ridiculous. They should be, as I said, at
least as prominent as the original transgression.'
On the issue of front page 'transgressions' he said:
'What I am saying is this. If we go to formal adjudication, you
come out with a formal adjudication, and had there been some
hideous transgression on the front page, then I would expect the
adjudication to be published, or at least start on the front page,
depending on how long the adjudication was going to be. I think
that would be entirely reasonable.'
It will be interesting to see whether his views are adopted by
editors in the future and, if they are not, whether Sir Christopher
will turn these statements into a change of policy on the part of
the press. Only at that point will the term in the PCC Code 'due
prominence' have any real meaning.
Jonathan
Coad 18 June
2003
166
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