Tuesday 1 October 2013

Labour demands apology from Mail

Source BBC News@ tienganhvui.com




The Daily Mail's Jon Steafel and Alastair Campbell clash on Newsnight



Labour has demanded an apology from the Daily Mail after the newspaper said using a photo of Ed Miliband's father's grave had been an "error of judgement".


The admission came after the Labour leader accused the Mail of lying by claiming the late Marxist academic Ralph Miliband had "hated Britain".


Mail deputy editor Jon Steafel said the picture was removed from its website after Mr Miliband complained to him.


But he told the BBC's Newsnight programme he stood by the reporting.


In Saturday's article, journalist Geoffrey Levy questioned whether the beliefs of Ralph Miliband, who died in 1994, may have influenced the Labour leader.


In a right of reply in Tuesday's Mail, Mr Miliband said his father, a Jewish refugee who fled Belgium aged 16 to escape the Nazis, "loved" Britain and had served in the Royal Navy.


'Bad aspects'

"There is no credible argument in the article or evidence from his life which can remotely justify the lurid headline," he said.


Interviewed later in the day, the Labour leader said he was "appalled" that having allowed him to respond, the paper then repeated its original article and wrote an editorial which described his father as having had an "evil legacy".


Mr Steafel said the original article's headline - "The man who hated Britain... The answer should disturb everyone who loves this country" - was "justified" when read in conjunction with the whole article .


Ed Miliband, with his father Ralph in 1989Ed Miliband pictured with his father Ralph in 1989


He told Newsnight: "[Ralph Miliband's] views on British institutions from our schools to our royal family, to our military to our universities, to the Church to our great newspapers ... what he said was that he felt that all of those things were bad aspects, were unfortunate aspects of British life...


"If you take those things together and you combine them with an espousing of a Marxist ideology, that in our view represented someone who hated British values," Mr Steafel said.


Ed Miliband has said he does not share his father's ideology but the Daily Mail has maintained it was fair to scrutinise the beliefs of his father as the Labour leader has talked of him being an influence.


However, Mr Steafel confirmed he had agreed to remove the picture of the grave, which included the caption "grave socialist", after he had taken a call from Ed Miliband when the article was first published on its website on Saturday evening.


"I think using that picture was an error of judgement and that's why we didn't use it in the paper," he said.


Heated exchanges

In a series of heated exchanges with Mr Steafel on Newsnight, Alastair Campbell, the former director of communications at Downing Street under Labour's Tony Blair, said the Daily Mail was "the worst of British values posing as the best" and the articles were "not defensible".




Ed Miliband: ''I'm not willing to see my father's good name undermined in this way''



He said its editor Paul Dacre should have appeared on Newsnight himself.


After the broadcast, a Labour Party spokesman said: "The deputy editor of the Daily Mail tonight admitted that it was an 'error of judgement' to publish a picture of Ralph Miliband's grave accompanied by a crude pun. The newspaper should now apologise for this error of judgement."


He added: "We continue to believe that the article headlined 'the man who hated Britain' and a subsequent article which described Ralph Miliband's legacy as "evil" were smears. The deputy editor of the Daily Mail showed tonight he could not justify either of them."


Wednesday's edition of the Daily Mail devotes four pages to the ongoing row and includes an abridged version of its editorial from the previous day.


It also highlights the support given to Mr Miliband from the prime minister and deputy prime minister on Tuesday for defending his father, as well as reflecting views from both sides of the debate by other political figures and its readers.





Đăng ký: Tieng Anh Vui

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