Media Standards Trust,
01/05/2007
Recent leaks about terror suspects are putting lives at risk, according to the head of Britain's Counter Terrorism Command. How widespread has leaking become, what damage do leaks do, and what can be done about it?
Context
The danger of leaks: In a speech to the Policy Exchange think tank Peter Clarke, the deputy assistant commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, said his counter-terrorism investigations were being compromised as a result of leaks, threatening the investigations themselves and jeopardising arrests. He suggested the reason for the leaks might be to “squeeze out some short-term presentational advantage”. Clarke did not name any sources of the leaks but he implied they have come from within the police or the government.
The Birmingham ‘plot’: To illustrate the problem Clarke cited the police raids in Birmingham on January 31st 2007. Although the raids did not begin until 4am on the morning of Wednesday 31st, news organisations already had journalists in Birmingham ready to cover them. The raids themselves were even reported in many of the papers that day (see The Sun, The Mirror, and the Daily Mail). A suspect, Clarke said, almost escaped as a consequence and the coverage itself increased community tensions.
The gravity of the issue: These warnings, the Independent argued in a Leader, ‘should be taken very seriously indeed’. Clarke, the paper said, ‘is a man who chooses his words carefully’. The deputy assistant commissioner’s remarks come after similar comments six months ago by the former head of MI5, Dame Eliza Manningham Butler, who, the Daily Mail said, ‘wrote to key figures including Cabinet Secretary Sir Gus O'Donnell, Met Commissioner Sir Ian Blair, and Home Office boss Sir David Normanton to raise her concerns about recent leaks’.
Following Clarke’s speech the Liberal Democrats introduced a dossier of alleged leaks, and David Cameron called for an inquiry. Tony Blair rejected these calls, saying there was no firm evidence of a leak.
Assigning blame: A number of articles suggested the government was to blame – both for the leaks cited by Clarke and for creating a “spin” culture that encourages such leaks. Ian Cobain and Will Woodward, writing in the Guardian, said they had been ‘told by a well-placed source that one disclosure… came from an official working for John Reid, the home secretary’. But what about the role of the media? Back in February, shortly after the raids themselves, Peter Wilby argued the newspapers bore a good deal of the responsibility. ‘The biggest press scandal of our time’ wrote Wilby on February 5th, ‘is… the newspapers' consistent and brazen disregard for the contempt laws’. Neither have the police escaped blame. ‘Journalists received up to three separate briefings’ before the raids, the Guardian claimed, and ‘both the Home Office and the police are implicated’.
Impact: in addition to the impact on the investigations themselves, Clarke said the leaks diminish public trust in intelligence. In the case of Birmingham they also, according to Dr Muhammad Abdul Bari, the secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain, create long term problems within communities. ‘There is a real and growing concern’ Bari wrote, ‘that Muslims accused of any criminal activity are being tried and condemned by the media and that their right to defend themselves in court is being seriously prejudiced and undermined’.
Questions
How widespread is leaking?
Clarke's speech implied that leaking was now widespread. Is this true? If so, hasn't it always been this way? Back in 2001 David Blunkett, then Home Secretary, accidentally confessed to a policy of leaking. Denying a specific leak Blunkett said it was "The first time since I have been in the Home Office [that] something hasn't been leaked on my behalf, I get criticised for the timing of putting it out." In his recent book, Trading Information, Nick Jones suggests that leaking has now become institutionalised.
Why do they do it?
Is it for short term presentational advantage? Do the government, police and others believe this is the only way they can control media coverage? Is it unrealistic to think we can avoid leaks in our media saturated culture?
What damage do leaks do?
To specific investigations? To the individuals and communities involved? To public trust?
What responsibility do the media have?
As Wilby and others have suggested, many news organisations are willing collaborators in leaking. Do they need to become more conscious of their own behaviour and the pressure they put on sources?
What can and should be done about it?
Peter Clarke suggests the laws surround contempt of court should be relaxed to make them more realistic to the media age. Peter Wilby suggests the opposite.
Tell us what you think. Join the debate.
Recommended
‘This culture of leaks shows contempt for the electorate’, Marina Hyde, The Guardian, 28-4-07
‘They see it here, they see it there, they see Al-Qaeda everywhere’, Simon Jenkins, The Sunday Times, 29-4-07
‘Anti-terrorism leaks blamed on spin doctors’, Nigel Morris, The Independent, 26-4-07
'The Guardian Profile: Peter Clarke', The Guardian, 29-7-05