So whose side are they on?
- 13 Feb 07, 10:52 AM
Is journalism 鈥 including 成人快手 journalism 鈥 鈥榦n the side of鈥 civil liberties? Or at least, on the side of free speech?
A question worth putting after the Sun twice asked last week 鈥渨hose side are these guys on?鈥 ... meaning, the 成人快手. It was first prompted by a correspondent on the Ten O鈥機lock News reminding viewers that the Birmingham terror arrests were 鈥渁n intelligence-led operation. Intelligence can be wrong". Forest Gate? Jean Charles de Menezes?
Then, after one of those men arrested - and released a week later 鈥 appeared on Radio 4's Today programme, the Sun :
- "It sometimes seems the 成人快手 would prefer terrorists to succeed than for an innocent man to be briefly held without charge. In their politically correct bubble, intelligence is always flawed and anti-terror action is inevitably heavy-handed. So the release of two suspects held over the alleged plot to behead a British Muslim soldier was a gift from heaven."
Over at the Daily Mail, columnist Richard Littlejohn to Abu Bakr's using his freedom to say on Today that Britain was 鈥榓 police state for Muslims鈥.
Littlejohn鈥檚 logic was tortured: mind, it was the same column in which he found it hard to condemn bomb attacks on government offices ... so long as not too many people weren鈥檛 too badly hurt.
I quote:
- 鈥淏e honest, until you heard that a woman had been injured, how many of you suppressed a cheer at the news someone had sent a letter bomb to the company which runs London's congestion charge?
- 鈥
- Even after we learnt that two men were treated for blast injuries, I'll bet that there were still plenty of motorists who thought: serves the bastards right.鈥
Two things made Abu Bakr a bit 鈥榙odge鈥 apparently; one, that he seemed 鈥榲ery well briefed鈥 and two, that he was represented by one of Britain鈥檚 best known civil liberties lawyers. He should have made it a fair fight and engaged a copyright lawyer, I suppose.
Littlejohn is, of course, wrong footed by the inconvenience that, in the eyes of the law, Abu Bakr is as innocent as anyone 鈥 perhaps even more innocent than someone with an ambiguous stance on blowing up government offices.
It would, he argues, have been ok to interview Abu Bakr if the 成人快手 had a record of interviewing, let鈥檚 say, the (innocent) associates of gangsters.
成人快手 Head of TV News, Peter Horrocks, posted here last Monday that it鈥檚 鈥渘ot the 成人快手鈥檚 job to take sides鈥.
Sort of.
If journalism is about anything it is about free speech. No-one would 鈥 or should - question the right of Sun leader writers and Mail columnists to speak freely. If predictably.
It鈥檚 the same right that allows the pub bigot to void his spleen in the snug 鈥 or an innocent bookshop employee like Abu Bakr to tell Today that he thinks he and his fellow Muslims don鈥檛 enjoy the same civil liberties that, say, Richard Littlejohn enjoys. However offensively well-briefed his argument seems.
The Mail and the Sun are in that great tradition of punchy, gobby, misguided, opinionated, rabble-rousing journalism in this country 鈥 and long may it survive. Long may they keep their right to be wrong.
But that right applies to every individual and it's the job of journalists to support it; the freedom to speak, to be treated fairly and according to the law and to be free to live a life unburdened by prejudice.
There鈥檒l always be forces pressing to take those liberties away; there鈥檚 always been a new 鈥榗risis鈥 that means this age is different from all that went before. The pieces will always be in flux 鈥
But when journalists write leaders and columns against freedom of speech 鈥 you really do have to wonder whose side they鈥檙e on.
Kevin Marsh is editor of the 成人快手 College of Journalism