Re: LM og RCP

From: Oddmund Garvik (garvik@worldonline.fr)
Date: Sat Mar 18 2000 - 15:59:31 MET

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    Solveig Mikkelsen a écrit :

    > Jeg fikk lyst til å vite mer om dette fordi det høres så snålt ut: Et
    > kommunistparti som er liberalister, og som agiterer mot miljøbevegelsen? Kan
    > du utdype hva du mener og hvor du har denne informasjonen fra? Jeg betviler
    > ikke det du sier (siden jeg sjøl ikke har noe kjennskap til verken partiet
    > eller magasinet), men vil gjerne ha mer kjøtt på beinet.

    Eg fann vevsida til LM Magazine: http://www.informinc.co.uk/

    Søkjer ein på "LM" på vevsida til ITN, finn ein fleire artiklar om
    rettsaka:
    http://www.itn.co.uk/

    Her er den siste artikkelen deira, frå i går:

    "ITN strikes blow for freedom of speech ITN won its libel action against
    LM magazine, formerly Living Marxism - the old house journal of the
    Revolutionary Communist Party, writes ITN Editor-in-Chief Richard Tait.

    We were defending the integrity of ITN and two of its reporters, Penny
    Marshall and Ian Williams, whom LM had defamed. We were defending the
    truth about the Bosnian Serb detention camps. And I believe that by
    taking action against LM's lies, ITN has also struck an important blow
    for freedom of speech in Britain.

    If ITN had not stood by its reporters and defended them in the courts
    they would have been ruined, professionally and personally.

    LM had accused them of deliberately misleading viewers in their brave
    and honest reports of the terrible conditions they saw at the Omarska
    and Trnopolje camps in Bosnia in August, 1992.

    I think attempts to ruin the reputations of honest journalists is a far
    greater threat to freedom of speech than the use of the law to protect
    the reputations and careers of those who have been libelled.

    The jury clearly agreed that serious harm had been done and unanimously
    awarded Ian and Penny the maximum amount of damages - £150,000 each.

    When LM launched their campaign against us in January, 1997, with a
    press release - it was without any attempt to contact anyone at ITN to
    check the story. The phones were ringing for reaction before we had even
    seen a copy of their article.

    I realised the moment I read their release that the story was a wicked
    lie.

    A little research into LM and the author of the article satisfied me
    that no journalist who did the minimum of checking would think their
    allegations credible.

    Those who did check the facts dropped the story. But others did not. It
    was clear to me that the allegation that some of the most important
    television news coverage of the decade had been fabricated was too
    delicious a prospect to let the facts get in the way of what they saw as
    a good story.

    ITN faced a dilemma. We were asked if we were going to sue LM. We were
    initially reluctant to do so. But the reaction of some reporters was `if
    you don't sue there must be something in the story.' The moment we did
    sue, the press line became `why are you bullying a little magazine?'

    They were encouraged by LM who launched a ludicrous 'Free Speech
    Appeal,' claiming to act in defence of freedom of expression. It was
    mainly supported by academics and writers. Few of them ever bothered to
    contact ITN for our side of the story.

    So LM went into court with their good wishes. But they had another ally
    - a balding man in uniform with a gun and a camcorder. He was a Bosnian
    Serb militia man who followed Penny and Ian around the camps as they
    filmed.

    His job was to intimidate the prisoners and to record what they told the
    ITN team. The prisoners were warned they would be killed afterwards if
    they spoke the truth about conditions. Survivors say some of them were.
    The militia man was not in court, but LM had somehow got hold of his
    pictures and used them in their defence.

    Do those who so uncritically backed LM really feel comfortable lining up
    on the same side as the people who persecuted the helpless inmates of
    the Bosnian camps? What freedom of expression did those inmates enjoy,
    when they could be killed for the wrong word whispered to a British
    reporter?

    We live in an age where some media 'experts' appear to take as fact
    allegations which suit their prejudices about television news; where
    columnists and pundits outnumber the hard news reporters on the front
    line of journalism.

    This case is a timely reminder that reporting what has happened as
    fairly and fearlessly as possible remains an essential foundation of a
    free society.

    If journalism is the first draft of history, only that commitment to
    first hand reporting will ensure that the truth is saved from the
    dishonesty of the partisan and the ideologue. The jury knew that freedom
    of expression was at stake in our battle with LM - that is why they
    found unanimously and overwhelmingly in favour of Penny Marshall, Ian
    Williams and ITN."

    Oddmund Garvik



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