People all over the world for peace and democracy、united! Go all out for a democratic China! Democracy、Freedom、Fairness、Rule by Law、Human Right、Better Life!
Homepage - > NewsandArticles
Rebekah Brooks to testify over phone-hacking, Murdoch faces summons
Date: 7/14/2011 7:25:23 AM Sender: CNN
Rebekah Brooks to testify over phone-hacking, Murdoch faces summons


按此在新窗口浏览图片

London (CNN) -- Former News of the World editor Rebekah Brooks is to testify before lawmakers next week, but News Corp. boss Rupert Murdoch has said he is unable to attend, a spokeswoman for a British parliamentary committee said Thursday.
Murdoch's son James, who heads the News International newspaper group, said he could not attend before August 10 or 11, the spokeswoman for the Culture, Media and Sports Select Committee said.
A House of Commons official told CNN that the Deputy Serjeant-at-Arms has been dispatched to serve a summons to Rupert and James Murdoch requesting their attendance.
The committee said in a statement it wanted all three to appear "to account for the behaviour of News International and for previous statements made to the committee in Parliament, now acknowledged to be false."
But correspondents say it is not clear whether Rupert Murdoch, who is not a British citizen, can be compelled to attend.
All three are facing public and political pressure to take responsibility for allegations that journalists working for Murdoch illegally eavesdropped on phone messages of thousands of people and bribed police.
Brooks is now chief executive of News International, the parent company of News of the World and a subsidiary of Murdoch's News Corp. empire.
In a letter to the select committee, she said she was available to appear "and welcome the opportunity to do so." However, she said she would not feel able to respond to questions that might prejudice the police investigation into the allegations.
In his letter, Rupert Murdoch said he was not available to attend the hearing on July 19 but was "fully prepared to give evidence to the forthcoming judge-led public inquiry." That investigation was launched by Prime Minister David Cameron Wednesday.
Meanwhile, London's top police officer is to be grilled in public Thursday about Scotland Yard's investigation into phone hacking and police bribery by journalists working for News International, the city's Metropolitan Police said.
The independent regulators want to question Sir Paul Stephenson following the announcement of an independent probe into the press, including journalists' relations with police.
Separately, police announced they arrested a 60-year-old man Thursday morning in London in connection with the phone-hacking probe, the seventh person arrested in the investigation. He has not been formally named.
Stephenson defended senior Metropolitan Police officers after they testified before lawmakers Tuesday about inquiries into illegal breaches of privacy by the News of the World, following accusations police did not probe deeply enough when they first looked into the matter.
"We will continue to pursue our investigations against alleged corrupt journalists and corrupt police officers with determination and support the victims in doing so," he said in a statement.
Cameron launched the wide-ranging investigation into the British press shortly before News Corp. withdrew its bid to take over British satellite broadcaster BSkyB.
The moves came in the wake of public and political fury at allegations that journalists working for Murdoch illegally eavesdropped on phone messages of thousands of people and bribed police.
Cameron blasted Murdoch's company Wednesday as he launched the high-powered inquiry.
News Corp. executives need to focus not on taking over BSkyB, "but on clearing up the mess and getting their house in order," Cameron said.
He welcomed the withdrawal of the bid, which came hours before lawmakers voted across party lines to pass a symbolic measure urging Murdoch to give up his effort to take full ownership of the broadcaster, in which he already owns a controlling stake.
"It's the right decision (for the company), but also for the country," Cameron said. "Now we've got to get on with the work of the police investigation and the public inquiry that I've set up today."
"It has become clear that it is too difficult to progress in this climate," News Corp. Deputy Chairman Chase Carey said in announcing the company would end its attempt to increase its 39.1% share in BSkyB.
Opposition leader Ed Miliband of the Labour party -- who pushed the vote against the takeover -- welcomed the News Corp. decision and said it would not have happened had lawmakers not pressured Murdoch.
"The will of politicians was clear, the will of the public was clear, and now Britain's most powerful media owner has had to bend to that will," said Miliband, speaking as politicians rowdily debated the measure in the House of Commons.
Former Prime Minister Gordon Brown, whose family's private records are alleged to have been obtained by News International newspapers, said it was vital to maintain the right to a free press.
But, he said, staff at News International, a subsidiary of News Corp., "cynically manipulated our support of that vital freedom as their justification and then callously used the defense of a free press as the banner under which they marched in step, I say, with members of the criminal underworld."
This "criminal media nexus" claimed to be on the side of the law-abiding citizen but was, instead, "standing side by side with criminals against our citizens."
The criminality was "not the misconduct of a few rogues or a few freelancers," but was carried out "often on an industrial scale -- at its worst dependent on links with the British criminal underworld."
Brown also defended himself against assertions that his government had done too little to pursue claims of misconduct at News International, saying its relationship with the company was "neither cozy nor comfortable."
John Whittingdale, chairman of Parliament's Culture, Media and Sport Select Committee, said Wednesday that Rupert Murdoch would be "forever tarred" by his association with the scandal.
But he warned against vilifying the press in general. "It was not just newspapers that were responsible for these clearly unacceptable and often illegal activities; it was also newspapers who exposed them," he said. "A free press is an absolute fundamental cornerstone of a free society and we must not do anything to jeopardize that."
In announcing the public inquiry into press practices and ethics, Cameron said anyone "found guilty of wrongdoing -- or of allowing it -- must not only be brought to justice, they must also have no future role in the running of a media company in our country."
The judge leading the inquiry will be able to summon witnesses, including newspaper owners, and compel them to testify in public, under oath, Cameron announced.
The aim is to "bring this ugly chapter to a close and ensure that nothing like it ever happens again," the prime minister said.
Murdoch's company needs "root and branch change," Cameron said in the wake of the accusation that victims of phone hacking included a missing 13-year-old girl, Milly Dowler, who was later found to have been murdered.
Cameron met with the girl's family Wednesday. Miliband and Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg met with them separately earlier in the week.
The Dowlers are "delighted" by the launch of the judge-led investigation and pleased that politicians across the spectrum are working together on the issue, the family's lawyer, Mark Lewis, said after the meeting with Cameron.
The investigation will look at whether News International, or other newspaper groups broke the law, their relations with the police and politicians and press ethics and practices, Cameron said.
Miliband hammered Cameron for having hired a former top News International journalist to be his communications director after the editor left his newspaper, News of the World, in the wake of one of its journalists going to prison over phone hacking.
The editor, Andy Coulson, insisted he knew nothing about the crime but resigned from News of the World because it happened on his watch. Coulson resigned as Cameron's spokesman this year when the scandal blew up afresh.
Cameron said if Coulson lied about what he knew, he should end up in court.
"If I was lied to, if the police were lied to, if the select committee were lied to, it would be a matter of deep regret and a matter for a criminal prosecution," Cameron said. "But we must make sure that we judge people as innocent until proven guilty."
Journalists are accused of attempting to bribe police officers for information -- including personal contact details for members of the royal family -- in addition to the violation of privacy allegations.
The News of the World, which was Britain's best-selling newspaper, folded Sunday over other allegations of illegal breach of privacy at the order of James Murdoch.
The police officer leading the investigation said Tuesday they had identified 3,870 potential targets of phone-hacking and had notified 170 of them. The officer, Sue Akers, said a team of 45 police were going through 11,000 pages of documents seized from a private investigator working for News of the World.
The documents contain some 4,000 cell phone numbers and 5,000 land lines, Cameron said.
Murdoch flew Sunday to London, hours after the final edition of News of the World hit the stands. The publication was the first British national paper Murdoch bought, in 1969, as he began to propel himself from Australian newspaper proprietor to international media magnate.
News International owns the Sun, The Times and The Sunday Times in Britain.
Murdoch's News Corp. also encompasses Fox News, The Wall Street Journal, the New York Post and Harper Collins publishers.


中国民主党           主席:王军    China Democracy Party    Chairman: Wang, Jun
Address:               41-25   Kissena   Blvd.   FLR 1 #110,   Flushing,   NY   11355   USA
 Website:                            http://www.cdpwu.org                                 http://www.cdpwu.org/en
  E-mail: cdpwu1998@gmail.com  cdpwu@yahoo.com(yahoo email Password Stolen Dont Use)