Well, the
News of the World is no more. I can’t say that I will mourn it’s passing other
than the fact that it has been in print since 1843 and it always makes me pause
to witness the end of an era. I find it
interesting that what caused the paper to stumble was not the voyeuristic and
illegal ends it went to in order to titillate its readers but that it stepped
over a moral boundary. I had begun to
think that this country had no moral boundaries left. It wasn’t the taping of
phone calls that we objected to, it wasn’t the invasion of privacy of some
celebrity, it was the deletion of messages on a missing school girl’s phone and
the fact that this activity gave her parents and police hope that she may still
have been alive. It was this act that
sickened the nation because we all understand the fear and horror of losing a
child and we all understand how desperately we would cling onto any tiny hope.
Do I think
that News International have done the right thing in shutting down the News of
the World. Actually, I don’t. I think this was the most cynical act of “mea
culpa”, a dramatic white wash. Who benefits by the closure of the paper?
Certainly not the staff. Does the public? Well I don’t think they care one way
or the other. Do Milly Dowler’s parents care and all the other people spied on?
No, I imagine they would be more satisfied with legal prosecutions. So who does benefit? Well I think News International benefits from
the closure. In the past six months
alone the News of the Worlds sales figures have been about 7% down on the
previous year, month on month. They
haven’t been alone in this; the circulation figures for all newspapers are in
decline and it’s no real wonder. As we
become more online as a nation and satellite television brings us constant up
to date news channels, something has to give.
Print media is just part of a long line of changes, record shops, DVD
hire shops, book shops, libraries; they are all gradually being challenged,
threatened and re-moulded.
The
Murdochs must have looked at this awful fiasco and realised that there was a
way that they might be able to regain some public sympathy and shore up their
finances at the same time. They “nobly” threw themselves on their sword, whilst
stabbing their employees in the back with the same sword and cut away from a
loss making enterprise with a swift clinical detatchment. Cynical? You betcha! I am glad to see that their bid to get the
rest of the satellite market has been knocked back though. Looks like they
haven’t managed to glide through this untouched.
However,
I’m not particularly impressed with the police in the handling of this matter
either. To listen to senior officers in the Metropolitan Police Force say we
couldn’t pursue these claims because NotW wouldn’t cooperate are incredible. If
I commit an illegal act and am accused of that act, then I’m thrilled to
discover that if I fail to cooperate with a police investigation that the
matter will be dropped. Maybe if I had
close working links with the media and the politicians I would stand a better
chance of getting away with stuff. It’s
not a nice thought but it certainly seems to be the case.
Hogwash to
the lot of them!