UK police expand hack probe to other papers

AFP PHOTO/PARBUL

A screen grab image taken in London on July 19, 2011, shows outgoing British Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Paul Stephenson giving evidence to a Parliamentary Select Committee on the phone hacking scandal. Media mogul Rupert Murdoch, his son James and ex-aide Rebekah Brooks faced an extraordinary showdown with MPs Tuesday over a phone-hacking scandal that now threatens to engulf Britain's prime minister.

LONDON, Thursday

More newspapers became embroiled in Britain’s phone-hacking scandal Thursday as the deputy prime minister said the crisis was a chance to clean up “murky” ties between politicians and the media.

After hacking allegations at Rupert Murdoch’s News of the World closed the tabloid earlier this month, it emerged police have asked for files from a regulator which exposed the use of private investigators by other rival papers.

The scandal has also lapped at the door of Prime Minister David Cameron, who faces questions over discussions he had on Murdoch’s failed bid for pay-TV giant BSkyB, and his employment of a former Murdoch editor as his media chief.

Mr Nick Clegg, the Liberal Democrat deputy premier in Britain’s 15-month-old coalition government, defended Conservative Cameron but said a forthcoming judge-led public inquiry into the scandal should take strong measures.

“We have a once in a generation opportunity to really clean up the murky practices and dodgy relationships taken root at the very heart of the British establishment between the press, politicians and the police,” he said.

Speaking at a press conference in London, he said Mr Cameron had been “very categorical that no inappropriate discussions took place” with Mr Murdoch’s aides over the BSkyB bid, which collapsed earlier this month amid the furore.

Mr Cameron’s opponents have seized on his comments as admitting that he did have conversations of some kind with Murdoch’s lieutentants over the controversial deal for full control of Britain’s biggest satellite broadcaster.

Public outrage has until now focused on Murdoch, with the ageing tycoon being hit with a foam pie during a parliamentary hearing on Tuesday, due to revulsion over claims that the News of the World hacked a murdered girl’s voicemails.

But other media groups are now under the spotlight after Britain’s Information Commissioner’s Office said police had requested files from a 2006 inquiry into the use of private investigators by newspapers.

The office, an independent body promoting data privacy, alleged that the middle-market Daily Mail made the most requests to private investigators, followed by the Sunday People and the Daily Mirror, published by Trinity Mirror Group.

Scotland Yard said it would not discuss specific lines of inquiry.

The Daily Mail had made 952 requests for confidential information, followed by the Sunday People on 802 requests, the Daily Mirror on 681 and The Mail on Sunday 228.