Harbinder Singh Rana on the Queen's Jubilee Barge |
To judge from the activities of the British Press the
Leveson Enquiry on Press standards and influence may as well not be happening –
paparazzi photos are still being used and personal stories are still being run
in the Yellow Press without a shred of “Public Interest” pretense.
London’s Evening Standard which is the sole evening
newspaper in the capital has never been famous for its journalistic standards.
It was formerly part of Northcliffe Newspapers owned by the Rothermere family
and the Daily Mail was its sister paper. The first Lord Rothermere was an enthusiastic
appeaser of the Nazis prior to World War 2 and got the newspaper the nickname “The
Daily Heil” for his editorial line that Herr Hitler was a reasonable sort of chappie
we could do business with. His son used to lecture Britain on patriotism and
family values while living in tax exile with his Japanese mistress.
Three years ago the paper was sold to Alexander Lebedev, a Russian Oligarch who emerged with unexplained millions in the murky world of Boris Yesltin’s Russia. He gave assurances on editorial independence and his “fitness” to be a newspaper proprietor which were thrown out the window during the recent London Mayoral Election when, for two weeks beforehand, it devoted over four pages a day to pro- Boris Johnson editorial – indeed so naked was its bias it even had Boris ads on the top and side of its website. Interestingly the Evening Standard is now a free paper and is distributed under a commercial agreement at Transport for London stations controlled by one Boris Johnson, Mayor of London. Dwell not on these matters now; they are the subjects of complaints to the Returning Officer and the Electoral Commission.
Three years ago the paper was sold to Alexander Lebedev, a Russian Oligarch who emerged with unexplained millions in the murky world of Boris Yesltin’s Russia. He gave assurances on editorial independence and his “fitness” to be a newspaper proprietor which were thrown out the window during the recent London Mayoral Election when, for two weeks beforehand, it devoted over four pages a day to pro- Boris Johnson editorial – indeed so naked was its bias it even had Boris ads on the top and side of its website. Interestingly the Evening Standard is now a free paper and is distributed under a commercial agreement at Transport for London stations controlled by one Boris Johnson, Mayor of London. Dwell not on these matters now; they are the subjects of complaints to the Returning Officer and the Electoral Commission.
However a recent Standard article under Ross Lydall’s byline
plummets to a new low. Under the teasing headline;
“Met police: Sex attacker on royal Jubilee barge posed no
threat”
They ran a story over the Jubilee Weekend that a convicted
sex offender was allowed on the royal barge for the Diamond Jubilee pageant
because he was not considered a threat to the royal family, it emerged today.
The Standard reported;
“Harbinder Singh Rana, 52, was a guest of the Prince of
Wales on Spirit of Chartwell despite having been sentenced to four years in
jail in 1986 for five counts of indecent assault, 11 counts of assault causing
actual bodily harm and one count of attempted assault.
He met Charles through his work as a director of the Anglo
Sikh Heritage Trail, which aims to promote awareness of the links between Sikhs
and Britons, and was accompanied by his 22-year-old daughter Kamalpreet.”
I commented under the story in the Standard on the 7th
June 2012;
“I hope the Attorney General prosecutes the ES for what
appears to be a clear breach of the 1974 Rehabilitation of Offenders Act. Once
a Court has tried a case and decided on punishment society's only interest is
in seeing the offender is rehabilitated and does not re-offend. Harbinder Singh
Rana is clearly in this category and has done much to atone for his crime.
Perhaps in the interests of honest journalism Sarah Sands
can tell us how the ES got hold of this information and how publishing it
complies with the PCC Code of Conduct and the Data Protection Act?”
In the best traditions the Evening Standard didn't publish
this comment critical of its Editor. Good to see that the Press has cleaned up
its act during the Leveson enquiry. Particularly this Russian owned, opaquely
financed "Free Paper."
Mr and Mrs Queen and family on the Jubilee Barge |
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