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Pro-Gaddafi troops ‘shot photographer missing in Libya’

Anton Hammerl’s family learn he was killed in April during attack when three other journalists were captured Anton Hammerl, an award-winning, British-based photographer who had been missing in Libya since early April, was killed during an incident in which three other journalists were captured, it has been revealed. Hammerl, who had joint South African and Austrian citizenship but lived in Surbiton, Surrey, had cut his teeth covering the township wars in South Africa. “On 5 April 2011, Anton was shot by Gaddafi’s forces in an extremely remote location in the Libyan desert,” Hammerl’s family announced on Thursday. “According to eyewitnesses, his injuries were such that he could not have survived without medical attention.” News of Hammerl’s death was given to his family by Clare Gillis and James Foley, two American reporters who were captured by forces loyal to the Libyan leader, Muammar Gaddafi, in a remote area of eastern Libya and released on Thursday. They had been given suspended sentences of a year in prison for entering Libya illegally. Gillis and Foley said after their release that they, along with Hammerl and the Spanish photographer Manu Brab, arrived at a rebel-held frontline early on 5 April. Almost immediately, the rebels were put to flight by an attack by pro-Gaddafi forces, including two Libyan military trucks which the journalists could see driving towards them. “It all happened in a split second,” Foley told the Global Post . “We thought we were in the crossfire. But, eventually, we realised they were shooting at us. You could see and hear the bullets hitting the ground near us.” Hammerl, who was closest to the pro-Gaddafi forces, dived for cover but was shot in the abdomen. Hearing him cry out, Foley asked: “Are you OK? “No,” was Hammerl’s only reply. “I thought instinctively that we were all going to get killed, so I jumped up to surrender and screamed that we were journalists,” Foley said. He added that the three surviving journalists had struggled with how to communicate the news of Hammerl’s death to his family. “We knew collectively that if we spoke about Hammerl’s death while we were detained, then we would be in greater danger ourselves. But now that we’re free, it’s our moral imperative to tell the story of this great journalist and father,” he said. The news of Hammerl’s death brings to an end weeks of uncertainty for Hammerl’s wife and young family who had heard contradictory reports from the Libyan authorities about what had happened to him, being first informed he was safe and being held and later that there was no news of him. A statement put out by his family read: “From the moment Anton disappeared in Libya we have lived in hope as the Libyan officials assured us that they had Anton. It is intolerably cruel that Gaddafi loyalists have known Anton’s fate all along and chose to cover it up.” South Africa’s foreign minister claimed on Friday that Gaddafi fed South Africa misinformation about Hammerl. Maite Nkoana-Mashabane said Libya had still not come forward with the truth. “We kept getting reassurance and misinformation throughout,” Nkoana-Mashabane said. Referring to Gaddafi, she said the assurances came “at one stage from himself, yes, to say that they are all alive and that they are well”. Hammerl began his career in photojournalism covering the violence in South Africa and was mentored byKen Oesterbroek, one of the key figures in the Bang Bang Club – a small group of photographers which documented the conflicts. A family friend, Bronwyn Friedlander said: “Anton was a deeply moral and talented human being who did not deserve to die this way. But he died doing what he did best, telling stories with his photographs of the most vulnerable people.” Karel Prinsloo, of the Associated Press, who started his career in photography in South Africa at the same time as Hammerl, also paid tribute to him. “There are people like me who go straight for the news as it happens in front of us, but Anton was a much more thoughtful photographer,” he said. “He wanted to know why things were happening and what it meant to the people involved. He was a thinking man’s photographer.” The chairman of South Africa’s National Press Club, Yusuf Abramjee, told the South African Press Association that Hammerl would be remembered as “an outstanding photographer and a good human being”. News of Hammerl’s fate follows the deaths of Chris Hondros and Tim Hetherington, who were killed in a mortar attack on 20 April in Misrata. Libya Muammar Gaddafi Africa Middle East South Africa Peter Beaumont guardian.co.uk

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Pro-Gaddafi troops ‘shot photographer missing in Libya’

Anton Hammerl’s family learn he was killed in April during attack when three other journalists were captured Anton Hammerl, an award-winning, British-based photographer who had been missing in Libya since early April, was killed during an incident in which three other journalists were captured, it has been revealed. Hammerl, who had joint South African and Austrian citizenship but lived in Surbiton, Surrey, had cut his teeth covering the township wars in South Africa. “On 5 April 2011, Anton was shot by Gaddafi’s forces in an extremely remote location in the Libyan desert,” Hammerl’s family announced on Thursday. “According to eyewitnesses, his injuries were such that he could not have survived without medical attention.” News of Hammerl’s death was given to his family by Clare Gillis and James Foley, two American reporters who were captured by forces loyal to the Libyan leader, Muammar Gaddafi, in a remote area of eastern Libya and released on Thursday. They had been given suspended sentences of a year in prison for entering Libya illegally. Gillis and Foley said after their release that they, along with Hammerl and the Spanish photographer Manu Brab, arrived at a rebel-held frontline early on 5 April. Almost immediately, the rebels were put to flight by an attack by pro-Gaddafi forces, including two Libyan military trucks which the journalists could see driving towards them. “It all happened in a split second,” Foley told the Global Post . “We thought we were in the crossfire. But, eventually, we realised they were shooting at us. You could see and hear the bullets hitting the ground near us.” Hammerl, who was closest to the pro-Gaddafi forces, dived for cover but was shot in the abdomen. Hearing him cry out, Foley asked: “Are you OK? “No,” was Hammerl’s only reply. “I thought instinctively that we were all going to get killed, so I jumped up to surrender and screamed that we were journalists,” Foley said. He added that the three surviving journalists had struggled with how to communicate the news of Hammerl’s death to his family. “We knew collectively that if we spoke about Hammerl’s death while we were detained, then we would be in greater danger ourselves. But now that we’re free, it’s our moral imperative to tell the story of this great journalist and father,” he said. The news of Hammerl’s death brings to an end weeks of uncertainty for Hammerl’s wife and young family who had heard contradictory reports from the Libyan authorities about what had happened to him, being first informed he was safe and being held and later that there was no news of him. A statement put out by his family read: “From the moment Anton disappeared in Libya we have lived in hope as the Libyan officials assured us that they had Anton. It is intolerably cruel that Gaddafi loyalists have known Anton’s fate all along and chose to cover it up.” South Africa’s foreign minister claimed on Friday that Gaddafi fed South Africa misinformation about Hammerl. Maite Nkoana-Mashabane said Libya had still not come forward with the truth. “We kept getting reassurance and misinformation throughout,” Nkoana-Mashabane said. Referring to Gaddafi, she said the assurances came “at one stage from himself, yes, to say that they are all alive and that they are well”. Hammerl began his career in photojournalism covering the violence in South Africa and was mentored byKen Oesterbroek, one of the key figures in the Bang Bang Club – a small group of photographers which documented the conflicts. A family friend, Bronwyn Friedlander said: “Anton was a deeply moral and talented human being who did not deserve to die this way. But he died doing what he did best, telling stories with his photographs of the most vulnerable people.” Karel Prinsloo, of the Associated Press, who started his career in photography in South Africa at the same time as Hammerl, also paid tribute to him. “There are people like me who go straight for the news as it happens in front of us, but Anton was a much more thoughtful photographer,” he said. “He wanted to know why things were happening and what it meant to the people involved. He was a thinking man’s photographer.” The chairman of South Africa’s National Press Club, Yusuf Abramjee, told the South African Press Association that Hammerl would be remembered as “an outstanding photographer and a good human being”. News of Hammerl’s fate follows the deaths of Chris Hondros and Tim Hetherington, who were killed in a mortar attack on 20 April in Misrata. Libya Muammar Gaddafi Africa Middle East South Africa Peter Beaumont guardian.co.uk

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HMV sells Waterstone’s to Russian billionaire for £53m

Alexander Mamut promises to refocus Waterstone’s as local bookseller – and will install Daunt Books founder to run it HMV Group has agreed to sell its Waterstone’s business, which operates through 296 high street stores, to Russian investment billionaire Alexander Mamut in a £53m deal. Mamut said he believed the future success of the chain lay in “an undiluted commitment to books and bookselling” and promised to refocus Waterstone’s as a local community book store. The sale was announced on Friday morning with a trading update confirming a dismal trading performance across HMV’s businesses since the start of the year. Comparable sales within the group’s music and DVD stores fell 15.1% for the 17 weeks to 30 April, while like-for-like sales at Waterstone’s over the same period were down 8.4%. Mamut has said he will install James Daunt, founder of the Daunt Books chain of independent bookshops in London, to run Waterstone’s. Current managing director Dominic Myers will remain within HMV. The new book store boss has promised a “comprehensive review” of the business. In a statement he said: “Mr Mamut’s investment has been inspired and motivated by the opportunity to refocus the core business of bookselling towards a renewed customer responsiveness.” Mamut added: “The opportunity ahead to reposition Waterstone’s as a regional and local community orientated bookseller is an exciting one. The business enjoys a great loyalty from its customers and I believe that there is considerable integrity and value in the brand.” Mamut, who owns 6% of HMV Group, is said to be a friend of Chelsea football club boss Roman Abramovich and was previously an adviser to Boris Yeltsin. For a period he ran MDM-Bank, founded by billionaire Andrey Melnichenko and in 2007 he acquired US blogging site LiveJournal.com. According to Forbes, he has a net worth of $1.2bn (£740m). The sale of Waterstone’s, which employs 4,500 staff, will provide a major boost for HMV chief executive Simon Fox as he continues to seek new borrowing terms from the firm’s banks after dire trading results left the business heading for a breach of its loan covenants. HMV’s lenders are led by Lloyds Banking Group and Royal Bank of Scotland. He made clear the sale to Mamut would only go through if a new lending agreement could be reached. Proceeds from the disposal are expected to arrive by the need of next month, though HMV’s bank and pension trustees must first give their consent. Elsewhere HMV is pressing ahead with plans to close 40 stores in an effort to pare back its overheads. It is also exploring a possible sale of its Canadian business. “A sale of Waterstone’s to Alexander Mamut provides a good new home for the business,” said Fox. “We expect this deal to enable the group to achieve a reduction in [its] borrowing requirements, and, in turn, focus on plans for transforming the HMV Group into a broad-based entertainment business.” Waterstone’s HMV Booksellers Retail industry Media business Simon Bowers guardian.co.uk

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Construction slump and carbon costs blamed for 1,500 steel job losses

Government talk of economic recovery was undermined on Friday when the country’s largest steel maker announced plans to cut 1,500 jobs in Yorkshire and Teesside. Tata Steel, which bought the Corus business in 2007, blamed a continued slump in demand from the construction sector but also new climate change legislation for its decision. “We are aware that our employees and their families will experience a very unsettling few months as a result of this announcement. We will do everything we can to provide them with support and assistance,” said Karl-Ulrich Köhler, chief executive of Tata Steel’s European operations. “The continuing weakness in market conditions is one of the main reasons why we are setting out on this difficult course of action. Another is the regulatory outlook. EU carbon legislation threatens to impose huge additional costs on the steel industry. Besides, there remains a great deal of uncertainty about the level of further unilateral carbon cost rises that the UK government is planning,” he added. The Indian firm said it was proposing to close or mothball part of its Scunthorpe plant, putting at risk 1,200 jobs, as well as cutting 300 jobs at its sites on Teesside. But it also said it would invest £400m in its “Long Products” business over the next five years and hoped to bring a turnaround to the hard-pressed side of the business that it had achieved inside the speciality steel division. The news from the steel industry follows a roll call of redundancies from a swath of other industrial and retail employers with mobile phone company Nokia cutting 700 UK jobs, pharma group Novartis unveiling 550 redundancies and Mothercare closing 110 stores. There has also been bad news from drugs maker Pfizer with 2,400 jobs under threat in Kent and Focus DIY, which went into administration this month. But the steel industry has been doing better with a Thai company, SSI, announcing plans late last year to restart operations at a mothballed plant at Redcar. Unions said the latest cuts amounted to 8% of Tata’s UK workforce and were a “devastating blow” to the regions affected as the steel industry played a major role there. “Today’s announcement highlights just how fragile our economy is and the coalition Government should not be so quick to start talking about growth and recovery,” said Unite’s national officer, Paul Reuter. “Union representatives are currently working with Tata to mitigate the impact of the cuts. Unite has already demanded that there should be no compulsory redundancies and we believe that this should be possible to achieve. Business secretary Vince Cable admitted he was “very disappointed” at the Tata move adding: “This will be a worrying time for workers at Scunthorpe in particular, and also in Teesside.” Job losses Tata Construction industry Carbon emissions Terry Macalister guardian.co.uk

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Fox Launches Attack on Health Care Waivers as Being ‘Corrupt’

Click here to view this media Sean Hannity among others at Fox have been flogging this story all week; Hannity’s interview with Palin above just being one of the latest examples. It appears Tucker Carlson’s rag, the Daily Caller started this fake controversy and surprise, surprise, Fox decided to glom onto it. Here’s more from Media Matters — “Corrupt”: Fox News Launches Fact-Free Attack On Health Care Reform Waivers : Fox News, amplifying a fake controversy started by the Daily Caller, is claiming that 38 health-care reform “waivers” granted to businesses in Northern California are evidence of Rep. Nancy Pelosi and President Obama’s “corruption.” But the business owner who actually requested the waivers said that they were in no way connected to Pelosi and were part of an annual request for businesses throughout the country, not just in Pelosi’s congressional district. Read on…

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Happy Friday, NBers! Per usual, we've got an all-new episode of NewsBusted below the break, so check it out and let us know what you think. Oh, and make sure you subscribe to our YouTube channel . And if you're a blogger or website owner, click here to find out how to get every new episode automatically delivered to your site. Enjoy! Topics in today's show: — Recovery will take 'several years,' Obama says — Ron Paul running for president — WH wants cell phones to accept 'presidential updates' — Lehrer stepping down from PBS 'News Hour' — Omar bin Laden to sue US over father's burial — Porn found in Obama's hideout — Sen. Inhofe: dead Osama pictures are gruesome — Hotels offering Barbie-themed suites Starring: Jodi Miller Director: Bruce Roundtower Production: Dialog New Media

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Happy Friday, NBers! Per usual, we've got an all-new episode of NewsBusted below the break, so check it out and let us know what you think. Oh, and make sure you subscribe to our YouTube channel . And if you're a blogger or website owner, click here to find out how to get every new episode automatically delivered to your site. Enjoy! Topics in today's show: — Recovery will take 'several years,' Obama says — Ron Paul running for president — WH wants cell phones to accept 'presidential updates' — Lehrer stepping down from PBS 'News Hour' — Omar bin Laden to sue US over father's burial — Porn found in Obama's hideout — Sen. Inhofe: dead Osama pictures are gruesome — Hotels offering Barbie-themed suites Starring: Jodi Miller Director: Bruce Roundtower Production: Dialog New Media

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Operator of Japan’s tsunami-hit nuclear plant reports a record loss of £9.5bn

Tepco suffers biggest deficit by Japanese firm outside financial sector as it deals with failures that followed natural disaster The operator of Japan’s stricken nuclear power plant has announced record losses of 1.25 trillion yen (£9.5bn) as it counts the cost of ongoing efforts to contain the world’s worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl. Tokyo Electric Power (Tepco) said the losses – the biggest ever by a Japanese firm outside the financial sector – compared with a profit of 134bn yen the previous year. The firm’s beleaguered president, Masataka Shimizu, said on Friday that he would resign to take responsibility for the crisis at the Fukushima plant, now in its third month. Toshio Nishizawa, managing director, will replace him after a shareholders’ meeting on 28 June. Shimizu, whose resignation had been expected, did not appear in public for two weeks after the disaster and was later admitted to hospital suffering from fatigue. “I wanted to take managerial responsibility as a symbolic act of closure,” said Shimizu, who bowed in apology several times. “We are doing everything we can to resolve the crisis.” He defended the decision to appoint a successor from inside the company. “We put the highest importance on experience and expertise in our business operations when we chose the person for the top post,” he said. The head of the utility’s nuclear division, Sakae Muto, also resigned and its chairman, Tsunehisa Katsumata, is expected to step down once the reactors have been stabilised. Tepco vowed to bring radiation levels under control and achieve “cold shutdown” in four stricken nuclear reactors between October and January next year, a deadline some experts have dismissed as unrealistic . Earlier this week the company revealed that new data indicated that fuel rods in three of the reactors had melted in the immediate aftermath of the earthquake and tsunami that devastated Japan’s north-east coast on 11 March, killing an estimated 24,500 people. The plant, located 150 miles north of Tokyo, has spewed radiation into the atmosphere and contaminated seawater and agricultural produce, forcing the evacuation of 80,000 people living nearby. Work to cool the reactors has been hampered by dangerously high radiation levels at the site. Tepco’s losses result from the cost the reacting to the crisis and of scrapping four nuclear reactors at Fukushima. It also decided to abandon plans to build two more reactors. The firm faces a compensation bill running into trillions of yen that will hit profits for years to come. Its stock has fallen 83% since the day before the tsunami, wiping 2.9tn yen off its market value. The government last week agreed to set up a special fund using taxpayers’ money from which Tepco can draw cash – which it will then have to pay back – to cover damages claims. Some analysts say compensation payouts could top £80bn Tepco’s losses exceed the 812bn yen deficit suffered by Japan’s biggest telephone utility, Nippon Telegraph and Telephone, in 2002. Nishizawa sought to reassure consumers, saying Tepco had no immediate plans to increase electricity charges to help it through the most tumultuous time in its 60-year history. The firm said it would attempt to raise 600bn yen by selling land and other assets. Japan disaster Japan Natural disasters and extreme weather Nuclear power Energy Energy industry Justin McCurry guardian.co.uk

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Obama and Netanyahu set for tense meeting after president’s ’1967′ call

• Israel PM alarmed at new US stance on Palestine peace deal • Netanyahu seeks return to George Bush’s 2004 commitment Barack Obama is to meet Israel’s prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, at the White House in what is predicted to be a tense meeting after the US president’s speech in which he called for Israel to withdraw to its pre-1967 borders in any peace agreement. Netanyahu issued a strongly worded statement shortly after Obama finished speaking on Thursday, containing an unusually clear rebuke to the president. “Netanyahu expects to hear a reaffirmation from President Obama of US commitments made to Israel in 2004, which were overwhelmingly supported by both houses of Congress,” it said. “Among other things, those commitments relate to Israel not having to withdraw to the 1967 lines.” He was referring to a letter signed by George Bush, which gave US backing to Israel’s claim to retain the big settlement blocks in the West Bank when drawing borders between it and a future Palestinian state. Netanyahu was also alarmed at Obama’s reference to a future Palestinian state’s borders with Israel, Jordan and Egypt. Israel has long argued that it must keep a military presence along the Jordan River as a security buffer. Obama appeared to reject that. According to reports in the Israeli media, Netanyahu considered an even harsher response to Obama’s speech. What was issued was a “softened” version. An alarm sounded within the Israeli establishment as soon as it was announced that Obama would deliver a speech on events in the Middle East just days before Netanyahu was scheduled to address Congress. They feared he would set out his vision of an Israeli-Palestinian peace deal, thus severely limiting Netanyahu’s room for manoeuvre when his turn comes on Tuesday. But consultations between Washington and Jerusalem reassured Israeli officials that there would be no game-changing element in Obama’s speech. Now they feel they were misled. The issue of 1967 has figured large in speculation over what Netanyahu might say in his Congress speech, and whether he would mention the key date. To do so would be a significant step and might help unblock the talks, but it would concede an important red line for Israel and cause the prime minister severe difficulties with his fragile rightwing coalition. In the event, Obama uttered the numbers first, thereby possibly backing Netanyahu into a corner. “Obama’s speech comes as a major blow to [Netanyahu's] policy,” wrote Nahum Barnea, a columnist for Yedioth Ahronoth, Israel’s biggest-selling newspaper. “First because of [Obama's] explicit determination that the future border will be based on the 1967 borders. Netanyahu knows that if an agreement is ever signed, these will in fact be the borders – but he believed, and still believes, that ambiguity on this issue served him best.” Ben Caspit, a Ma’ariv columnist, wrote: “[Netanyahu] has heard, for the first time in history, an American president explicitly mention the 1967 borders as the basis for an arrangement between Israel and the Palestinians … This president, who now looks like a strong president, has crushed Netanyahu’s worldview, according to which there is no partner … [Obama] looks straight at Israel, looks it right in the eye, and tells it the truth to its face: the US is forever committed to the security and prosperity of the state of Israel but the US is not interested in continuing to lie to Israel and to itself. Everyone knows what the solution is, everyone is familiar with the formula, here it is before us. Let Israel kindly sign here, here and here, and start implementing.” An analysis by Simon Shiffer, also in Yedioth, said: “No amount of whitewashing can succeed in changing the bitter taste of the pill served by Obama to the Israeli prime minister … Obama is the first American president who has defined in such a clear and geographic manner the outline of the arrangement that is supposed to end the conflict, in his opinion.” The irony for many is that most of the international community has accepted for a long time that the pre-1967 lines must serve as the basis for any future negotiated border. A senior official in Netanyahu’s bureau was quoted by Israel Radio as saying that, following Obama’s speech, there was a sense in Jerusalem “that Washington fails to understand reality”. In terms of what happens next, there is no clear indication of how the US intends to follow up Obama’s statement with action to force the parties back to the negotiating table. That may become clearer as the two leaders meet on Friday, and in a series of speeches by both over the next few days. But few people anticipate a return to talks any time soon. The Palestinians have yet to respond to Obama’s speech. The president, Mahmoud Abbas, is consulting Palestinian and Arab leaders. They will not be happy with Obama’s dismissal of their efforts to win recognition of a Palestinian state at the United Nations general assembly in September. Meanwhile the construction of approximately 1,500 new housing units in East Jerusalem settlements was approved by a government committee on Thursday, and permits for a further 300-plus units in West Bank settlements were approved by the defence minister, Ehud Barak. Israel Binyamin Netanyahu Barack Obama Palestinian territories Middle East United States Harriet Sherwood guardian.co.uk

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Superinjunctions: Modern technology is completely out of control, says lord chief justice

Lord Judge: People who defy legal restrictions and ‘peddle lies’ over the internet should have to pay damages Modern technology is totally out of control, the lord chief justice has warned in a call for action to be taken against those who defy court injunctions and “peddle lies” on social media and websites. Lord Judge welcomed a report by an influential judicial committee on privacy orders that called for superinjunctions to be granted only in “very limited circumstances” and normally for short periods of time. But he admitted that many bloggers and sites such as Twitter were publishing information that traditional newspapers and television stations were prevented from revealing by court orders. There is no mention in the report of the impact of Twitter or the internet on the enforcement of court orders, but the lord chief justice said readers placed greater trust in the contents of traditional media than in those “who peddle lies” on websites. The internet had “by no means the same degree of intrusion into privacy as the story being emblazoned on the front pages of newspapers”, which “people trust more”, he said. The names of those people who had taken out anonymity orders have been circulating, sometimes inaccurately, on Twitter. Anybody can put anything on [such sites],” he said. Lord Judge said he believed that ways would be found to curtail the “misuse of modern technology” in the same way that those involved with online child pornography were pursued by the police. “Are you really going to say that someone who has a true claim for protection perfectly well made has to be at the mercy of modern technology?” he asked. “I’m not giving up on the possibility that people who peddle lies about others through using technology may one day be brought under control, maybe through damages, very substantial damages, maybe even injunctions to stop them peddling lies.” In a report that repeatedly stresses the importance of “open justice”, the study headed by the master of the rolls, Lord Neuberger, proposes giving the media advance notice of applications for gagging orders. Dismissing allegations that judges have been creating new laws beyond the authority of parliament, the committee on superinjunctions nonetheless states that “there was justifiable concern [last year] … that superinjunctions were being applied for, and granted, far too readily”. The report also says that media reports of comments made in parliament which set out to contravene injunctions may be in contempt of court. Reports of statements in the Commons and Lords are protected by parliamentary privilege only if they are published “in good faith and without malice”. Addressing the media at the royal courts of justice in central London, the lord chief justice: “It is, of course, wonderful for you if a member of parliament stands up in parliament and says something which in effect means an order of the court on anonymity is breached. “But you do need to think whether it’s a good idea for our lawmakers to be flouting a court order just because they disagree with a court order or they disagree with the privacy law created by parliament.” On Thursday the Liberal Democrat MP Lord Stoneham of Droxford asked a question in the Lords revealing details of an injunction obtained by the former Royal Bank of Scotland boss Sir Fred Goodwin preventing coverage of details of his private life – which later led to the order being part-lifted. Lord Judge said senior judges would be holding talks with the speakers of the Commons and the Lords over the issue. “It will take quite an effort for parliament to get a grip on this,” he said. The study will be scrutinised carefully by ministers, who have sent out mixed signals about whether they believe a privacy law needs to be introduced to provide clearer guidance for judges. David Cameron’s official spokesman said the government would consider Lord Neuberger’s report before deciding whether to legislate on privacy issues. The spokesman told reporters at a regular daily briefing: “We think it is important to find the right balance between individual rights of privacy on the one hand and the right to freedom of expression on the other. We think this is a very useful report and it is something we will be considering very carefully.” While no one knows the precise number of privacy injunctions in circulation, the committee says it is only aware of two genuine superinjunctions – those whose existence cannot even be revealed – having been granted since January 2010. One was set aside on appeal and the other was in force for only seven days. “The principle of open justice is a fundamental constitutional principle,” the report states, “although it is not an absolute principle. It applies to interim injunction applications as it does to trials. “… As they incorporate derogations from the principle of open justice, superinjunctions and anonymised injunctions can only be granted when they are strictly necessary. They cannot be granted so as to become in practice permanent.” The report sets out draft guidance on how applications should be processed in future, allowing third parties, including the media, to take part in or lodge objections to privacy proceedings. It is hoped the presence of other parties in such complex cases will provide reassurance that the cause of justice is being served and that the law is not being exploited by the wealthy to close down debate about matters of public interest. It is acknowledged that new legal procedures will be required to ensure that those who attend such hearings do not divulge details until they are reportable. “It will be a very rare case where advance notice of such applications to media organisations, which are likely to be affected by any order, can justifiably be withheld.” Lord Neuberger, who is the head of the civil judiciary, said: “Our starting point was the maintenance of the fundamental principles of open justice and freedom of speech. Where privacy and confidentiality are involved, a degree of secrecy is often necessary to do justice. “However, where secrecy is ordered it should only be to the extent strictly necessary to achieve the interests of justice. And where it is ordered, the facts of the case and the reason for the secrecy should be explained, as far as possible, in an openly available judgment.” In a clear rebuff to politicians who have accused judges of inventing novel legal precedents without reference to parliament, Lord Judge welcomed the report and observed: “Contrary to some commentary, unelected judges in this country did not create privacy rights. They were created by parliament [through enactment of the 1998 Human Rights Act]. “Now that they have been created, judges cannot ignore or dispense with them: they must apply the law relating to privacy matters as created by parliament – including those relating to the enforcement of privacy rights by injunctive relief, balancing them with the rights … of freedom of expression. “The relationship between parliament and the courts has, for generations, been predicated on mutual understanding and respect. Judges have never asserted, and they are not now asserting, any authority or jurisdiction over parliamentary proceedings or debate, which are exclusively matters for parliament.” Superinjunctions Privacy Social networking Twitter Privacy & the media Media law Newspapers Newspapers & magazines Facebook Internet Owen Bowcott guardian.co.uk

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