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Iran boycott for Nokia ‘collaboration’

The mobile phone company Nokia is being hit by a growing economic boycott in Iran as consumers sympathetic to the post-election protest movement begin targeting a string of companies deemed to be collaborating with the regime.

Wholesale vendors in the capital report that demand for Nokia handsets has fallen by as much as half in the wake of calls to boycott Nokia Siemens Networks (NSN) for selling communications monitoring systems to Iran.

There are signs that the boycott is spreading: consumers are shunning SMS messaging in protest at the perceived complicity with the regime by the state telecoms company, TCI. Iran’s state-run broadcaster has been hit by a collapse in advertising as companies fear being blacklisted in a Facebook petition. There is also anecdotal evidence that people are moving money out of state banks and into private banks.

Nokia is the most prominent western company to suffer from its dealings with the Iranian authorities. Its NSN joint venture with Siemens provided Iran with a monitoring system as it expanded a mobile network last year. NSN says the technology is standard issue to dozens of countries, but protesters believe the company could have provided the network without the monitoring function.

Siemens is also accused of providing Iran with an internet filtering system called Webwasher.

“Iranians’ first choice has been Nokia cellphones for several years, partly because Nokia has installed the facility in the country. But in the past weeks, customers’ priority has changed,” said Reza, a mobile phone seller in Tehran’s Big Bazaar.

“Since the news spread that NSN had sold electronic surveillance systems to the Iranian government, people have decided to buy other company’s products although they know that Nokia cellphones function better with network coverage in Iran.”

Some Tehran shops have removed Nokia phones from their window displays. Hashem, another mobile phone vendor, said: “I don’t like to lose my customers and now people don’t feel happy seeing Nokia’s products. We even had customers who wanted to refund their new Nokia cellphones or change them with just another cellphone from any other companies.

“It’s not just a limited case to my shop – I’m also a wholesaler to small shops in provincial markets, and I can say that there is half the demand for Nokia’s product these days in comparison with just one month ago, and it’s really unprecedented. People feel ashamed of having Nokia cellphones,” he added.

News of the boycott has appeared on the front page of Iranian pro-reform papers such as Etemad-e Melli, owned by the reformist candidate Mehdi Karroubi. Hadi Heidari, a prominent Iranian cartoonist, has published an image of a Nokia phone on a No Entry traffic sign.

A Nokia spokeswoman refused to comment on the company’s sales in Iran.

The Iranian authorities are believed to have used Nokia’s mobile phone monitoring system to target dissidents. Released prisoners have revealed that the authorities were keeping them in custody on the basis of their SMS and phone calls archive, which was at officials’ disposal.

One Iranian journalist who has just been released from detention said: “I always had this impression that monitoring calls is just a rumour for threatening us from continuing our job properly, but the nightmare became real when they had my phone calls – conversations in my case.

“And the most unbelievable thing for me is that Nokia sold this system to our government. It would be a reasonable excuse for Nokia if they had sold the monitoring technology to a democratic country for controlling child abuse or other uses, but selling it to the Iranian government with a very clear background of human rights violence and suppression of dissent, it’s just inexcusable for me. I’d like to tell Nokia that I’m tortured because they had sold this damn technology to our government.”

NSN spokesman Ben Roome said: “As in every other country, telecoms networks in Iran require the capability to lawfully intercept voice calls. In the last two years, the number of mobile subscribers in Iran has grown from 12 million to over 53 million, so to expand the network in the second half of 2008 we were required to provide the facility to intercept voice calls on this network.”

In other sectors, state-run TV has also been targeted by protesters who have listed products advertised on its channels and urged supporters to join a boycott. Companies are running scared, and viewers have noticed the number of commercials plummet.

“We don’t have many choices to show and continue our protests. They don’t let us go out, they have killed many, we are threatened to text people or distribute emails, they have summoned people who shout Allahu Akbar ['God is great'] on rooftops at nights, so we need to look for new ways,” said Shahla, a 26-year-old Iranian student.

“I can obviously see on the TV that they are facing an [advertising] crisis. This at least shows them how angry people are,” she added.

The SMS boycott, meanwhile, has apparently forced TCI into drastic price hikes. The cost of an SMS has doubled in recent days. Protesters view the move as a victory.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


dot.life

Had an e-mail about a new mobile phone directory?

Al Giordano: Lobbyist Lanny Davis Seeks a Rematch with Obama over Honduras Coup

Dear Mr. President: Remember, during the 2008 presidential primaries, the constant screeching national media presence from lawyer-lobbyist Lanny Davis? Yeah, him. The guy who…

Arianna Huffington: Bearing Witness 2.0: You Can’t Spin 10,000 Tweets and Camera Phone Uploads

When deadly riots broke out in China last week, the Chinese government sprang into message control mode. It choked off the Internet, blocked Twitter, and deleted updates and videos from social networking sites. At the same time, it invited foreign journalists to take a tour of the area. That’s right, it slammed the door in the face of new media — and offered traditional reporters a front row seat. The Chinese have clearly learned the lessons of Iran. The same can’t be said about the New York Times’ Roger Cohen who, writing about covering the Iran uprising, recently mounted an attack on search engines, news aggregation, and “miracles of technology” such as Twitter and real-time video delivered via camera phones — the very tools that allowed millions of people around the world to bear witness to what was happening in Iran. How bizarre is that?

Mobile Phone directory site down

Dominic Laurie
Working Lunch

mobile phone

The mobile phone number directory 118800 has suspended its services in order to carry out technical repairs.

The site’s owner Connectivity admits it is difficult to handle the number of unsubscribe requests from mobile phone users.

The site says that the downtime will also be used to make technical improvements to correct delays in connection times.

It is not able to take ex-directory requests at the moment.

In the meantime, "all ex-directory requests made by people in our directory to date are being processed. There will be no need to resend these requests", reads a statement on the company website.

Connectivity says that it hopes to have the site up and running again soon, but until that happens, customers will only be able to use the 118800 service over the phone, and only then to access landline numbers.

Rushed Launch

How the Service Works

  • Anyone searching for a number can type the name and location of the person into the 118800 website.
  • If the company has it, contact details will be sent in a text message to them.
  • If they do, they will call them up while you are still on the line and ask them whether they are prepared to have your call put through to them.
  • Both services cost £1.
  • In neither case is the mobile phone number given over to the person making the request.
  • 118800 gets its numbers from commercially available sources: market research companies, online businesses and number brokers.

Connectivity launched the phone and web based service in mid-June.

It admits it became operational sooner than it wanted to, but because of intense media interest, it decided to bring the start date forward. It concedes that its systems were not prepared.

Concerns by some mobile phone customers led many to want to remove their number off the 11880 database and become ex directory.

Controversy

Hundreds of Working Lunch viewers have emailed in, reporting problems when trying to take their numbers off the company’s list. The original story on the Working Lunch website covering the site’s launch, had over 1.3 million hits last week after the link began to be circulated as a viral email.

"We are accessing data in the same way that lots of other companies do for marketing purposes", Shona Forster, 118800′s Marketing Director, told Working Lunch last month.

She will appear on the the programme again on July 14 to address concerns sent in by viewers.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

LG App Store Will Focus on Asian Markets

LG Electronics is launching an online store for mobile phone applications with an initial focus on Asia and aspirations for a more global reach by year-end.
– SEOUL (Reuters) – LG Electronics, the world’s No. 3 handset
maker, is launching an online store for mobile phone applications
Tuesday with an initial focus on Asia and aspirations for a more global
reach by year-end.
Phone makers and mobile firms worldwide are in a race to match the
success of …


10 Ways To Be Productive in 10 Minutes

clock

Most of my free time, except when I’m doing it on purpose, tends to come in short blocks. I rarely have 2 hours free, but might, over the course of a work day, have those same two hours in twelve ten-minute bursts.

I realized recently that, for the most part, I waste all of this free time. Since it’s such a short period of time, it seems to not strike me as worth using productively. I spend those ten minute periods doing things like staring aimlessly at the computer screen, picking my nose, or trying to remember what on Earth I have to do in ten minutes. I’m a big fan of periodically doing this (zoning out for a while’s my favorite way to launch back into productive work), but I started to notice that, over the course of a day or week, that time really does add up.

So I developed a list of ten things to do with ten minutes. Now, when I’ve got a few minutes to spare or kill, I run down this list, and do one or two of them – it makes my time more productive, and tends to give me longer blocks of free time later, because I’ve already finished all the quick tasks that tend to pile up at the end of my task list.

Make a Phone Call

Since most of us seem to be near a phone just about 24 hours a day, and always seem to have someone we should or have to call, free moments are the natural time to make a few phone calls. Only having ten minutes is a nice bonus – it makes sure you’re not going to get into some long, drawn-out conversation you’d rather not have. Whether you need to follow up on something, make a plan, or just catch up with a friend, phone calls can be done quickly, and anywhere.

Cook

If you’ve got a few minutes, make yourself some food, either for now or for later. Sometimes I’ll make lunch for the next day, or just throw together a snack for when I inevitably get hungry (usually a point when I don’t have ten seconds to spare, much less ten minutes). Having something around to munch on, or having the cooking process started, makes it all go faster when I need it to.

Nap

I’m a huge proponent of cat-naps, and anyone who says they don’t work is a dirty liar. Put your head down, close your eyes, and go to sleep. Sure, you’ve only got ten minutes, but who cares? The simple act of closing your eyes, clearing your head and relaxing (more akin to meditation) is hugely beneficial, as is even a few minutes of sleep. You’ll come back rejuvenated, in a better place to do more later.

Read Something

Keep a reading list somewhere accessible. I used to have a bookmarks file on my computer called “Read Later”; now I use Instapaper. Wherever you keep it, keep a list of things you want to read of watch, and plow through a few of them in spare moments. Applications like Instapaper are great because they have mobile versions, but any list you can come up with works.

Write Emails

This is much the same as phone calls – we’ve all got emails we could write, even if they’re not absolutely essential this very second. For me, at least, I hate writing emails longer than about six sentences, so I tend to leave them off as long as possible. I realize, though, that in ten minutes I can write a number of emails, and get through a good chunk of my “Reply To” list. Makes other people happy, and makes me feel more productive. Win-win.

Strike Up a Conversation

If you’ve got nothing to do, why not go build up a relationship? Maybe it’s the person in your neighbor cubicle, or maybe it’s the girl behind the counter at the coffee shop – whoever it is, strike up a conversation. Time flies, and who knows? You might just meet someone fascinating.

Clean Up

The single most productive thing I do in these in-between times is organize. In ten minutes, it’s ridiculous how much filing I can get done, or how much email purging and sorting I can get through. Pick one area or one task, and plow through it. I try to clear my desk in ten minutes, and almost always find I can. Usually I just throw everything away, but that’s beside the point. Ten minutes is more than enough time to make a huge dent in even the biggest piles of junk.

Brainstorm

Brainstorming and mind mapping are great ways to spend a few spare minutes, and are great because you can do either with almost anything: a computer, paper, a napkin, or whatever you might find at hand. Just start writing stuff – what do you have to do? What cool ideas do you have? You’ll be amazed how much comes out, and how quickly, when you just sit there and start writing. Or, try making a list of 100, a list centered around a particular topic (say, Ideas for Making Millions) that’s exactly 100: no more, no less. Only having ten minutes makes the ideas fly out, and you’ll be amazed how good they are.

Stumble

StumbleUpon, a website/toolbar that takes you to random webpage after random webpage, is frequently single-handedly credited with the downfall of Western Civilization. You know what? I’m cool with that. Stumbling is a great way to learn new things, expose yourself to interesting Web tidbits you’d never find otherwise, and broaden your horizons of all things Web. Spend a few minutes with StumbleUpon, and I guarantee you’ll learn something.

Journal

I kept a journal for a long time, and then stopped once I discovered I’m not interesting in the least. Now I wish I hadn’t stopped – who knows who might one day find it interesting, or when I’ll want to look back? Instead of a long-form journal (though I highly recommend keeping one if it works for you), just take a few minutes and write down a few high- and low-lights of the day. Usually, just jot down the first few things that come to mind about your life since you wrote last. In a year, ten years, or a hundred, you’ll be glad you did.

What do you do to fill in the blanks, and make use of these short bursts of free time?

Photo: Vahid Rahmanian


David Pierce is a college student, freelance writer, and lover of all things Web-based. He blogs about the digital world at The 2.0 Life, and can frequently be found on Twitter .


Marvin Ammori: What Sotomayor Could Mean for Network Neutrality and the First Amendment

Senator Al Franken will ask Judge Sotomayor questions this week as a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee and has said he will ask about…

New claims of tabloid phone hacking

• Top BBC executive was affected, says newspaper
• Police have begun to contact alleged victims

A top BBC executive and the former Metropolitan police commissioner Sir Ian Blair were targeted by the News of the World’s phone hacking operation, it was claimed today.

Blair was named in a report in the Sunday Times, part of Rupert Murdoch’s News International, which also owns the News of the World. However, tonight police sources denied his name was on the list.

The names emerged as the Met said it had begun to contact people who allegedly had been the subjects of hacking by the tabloid newspaper, but warned that the process could take some time to complete. “We are not discussing who we are contacting at all,” a spokeswoman said.

BBC sources said that the corporation did not know which of its executives had been affected by the scam at the paper, which led to Clive Goodman, then News of the World royal correspondent, and the private investigator Glenn Mulcaire, going to jail in 2007.

Andy Coulson, former editor of the tabloid and now director of communications for the Conservative party, subsequently resigned from the paper saying he did not know about the hacking.

Late on Friday the police confirmed they had started to contact people after the Guardian revealed last week that News International had paid £1m to settle privacy actions brought by Gordon Taylor, chief executive of the Professional Footballers’ Association, and two others who took action after Mulcaire hacked into their mobile phone messages.

“The process of contacting people is under way and we expect this to take some time to complete,” the police said.

The Met today refused to divulge how many people it was contacting.

The Sunday Times reported that the police investigation into Goodman and Mulcaire uncovered a list of “fewer than 20 people”; it included Boris Johnson, now the London mayor, and a senior executive at the BBC, whose phones were illegally accessed.

This list includes those named in the 2006 court action against Goodman and Mulcaire – besides Taylor, the model Elle Macpherson, the Liberal Democrat MP Simon Hughes, the publicist Max Clifford, and football agent Sky Andrew.

Macpherson’s publicist said in a statement: “Elle is obviously very concerned that her private telephone conversations and those of other people may have been intruded upon by reputable newspapers. She is aware that the director of public prosecutions (DPP) and the information commissioner have files on the issue. “Miss Macpherson is confident in the ability and the determination of the DPP, the police and information commissioner to ensure that appropriate and proportionate action is taken to prevent any further abuse.”

The DPP is reviewing police evidence and could recommend further charges.

A second, larger, list of about 50 people, contained the names Mulcaire had obtained mobile phone details for, but which police had no evidence had been successfully hacked. The Sunday Times reported that Blair and the former culture minister Tessa Jowell were on this list.

The third list, according to the Sunday Times, reportedly included the former deputy prime minister John Prescott and held between 400 and 500 names that Mulcaire wanted to target but for which he had no numbers.

This week the culture, media and sport committee, which has reopened its 2007 phone hacking inquiry in the light of the Guardian’s revelations, will hear evidence from the Guardian.

The following week, the News International lawyer Tom Crone, and News of the World editor Colin Myler (appointed after Coulson’s resignation), will go before the MPs. The committee hopes to hear evidence from the former executive chairman of News International Les Hinton, who at the original inquiry said Goodman had been acting alone without the knowledge of News of the World executives. Hinton has yet to confirm his attendance.

Public figures and celebrities who fear they were the subjects of the phone hacking have been contacting lawyers. The Bethnal Green and Bow MP George Galloway said he was seeing if any action could be taken. The politician had clashed with the paper in 2006 when its investigations editor, Mahzer Mahmood, attempted to “sting” him at a hotel and implicate him in illegal political funding.

Rod Christie-Miller, partner at the specialist media law firm Schillings, said: “Clients are going to want to see what comes out. Sooner or later there is going to be more concrete evidence about who has been targeted.”

Christie-Miller said his firm was already suspicious that phone hacking could have been used against high-profile clients before the story broke.

“It is something we were concerned may have been happening,” he added. “We have advised clients to change settings on phones and turn off bluetooth.”

One lawyer told mediaguardian.co.uk he had advised clients to “hold their horses” to see what details emerged over the coming days but added that legal claims were “imminent”.

The report in the Sunday Times, sister paper of the News of the World, shed further light on the Gordon Taylor case.

The paper stated: “Taylor’s claim was settled when new evidence emerged out of the police files that another News of the World reporter knew how Mulcaire was obtaining some of his information,

“That reporter has since left the paper and there is no evidence he committed any offence. News International executives are not aware of any other evidence in the police files that show any other News of the World journalist was involved in commissioning Mulcaire to hack phones.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


New claims of tabloid phone hacking

• Top BBC executive was affected, says newspaper
• Police have begun to contact alleged victims

A top BBC executive and the former Metropolitan police commissioner Sir Ian Blair were targeted by the News of the World’s phone hacking operation, it was claimed today.

Blair was named in a report in the Sunday Times, part of Rupert Murdoch’s News International, which also owns the News of the World. However, tonight police sources denied his name was on the list.

The names emerged as the Met said it had begun to contact people who allegedly had been the subjects of hacking by the tabloid newspaper, but warned that the process could take some time to complete. “We are not discussing who we are contacting at all,” a spokeswoman said.

BBC sources said that the corporation did not know which of its executives had been affected by the scam at the paper, which led to Clive Goodman, then News of the World royal correspondent, and the private investigator Glenn Mulcaire, going to jail in 2007.

Andy Coulson, former editor of the tabloid and now director of communications for the Conservative party, subsequently resigned from the paper saying he did not know about the hacking.

Late on Friday the police confirmed they had started to contact people after the Guardian revealed last week that News International had paid £1m to settle privacy actions brought by Gordon Taylor, chief executive of the Professional Footballers’ Association, and two others who took action after Mulcaire hacked into their mobile phone messages.

“The process of contacting people is under way and we expect this to take some time to complete,” the police said.

The Met today refused to divulge how many people it was contacting.

The Sunday Times reported that the police investigation into Goodman and Mulcaire uncovered a list of “fewer than 20 people”; it included Boris Johnson, now the London mayor, and a senior executive at the BBC, whose phones were illegally accessed.

This list includes those named in the 2006 court action against Goodman and Mulcaire – besides Taylor, the model Elle Macpherson, the Liberal Democrat MP Simon Hughes, the publicist Max Clifford, and football agent Sky Andrew.

Macpherson’s publicist said in a statement: “Elle is obviously very concerned that her private telephone conversations and those of other people may have been intruded upon by reputable newspapers. She is aware that the director of public prosecutions (DPP) and the information commissioner have files on the issue. “Miss Macpherson is confident in the ability and the determination of the DPP, the police and information commissioner to ensure that appropriate and proportionate action is taken to prevent any further abuse.”

The DPP is reviewing police evidence and could recommend further charges.

A second, larger, list of about 50 people, contained the names Mulcaire had obtained mobile phone details for, but which police had no evidence had been successfully hacked. The Sunday Times reported that Blair and the former culture minister Tessa Jowell were on this list.

The third list, according to the Sunday Times, reportedly included the former deputy prime minister John Prescott and held between 400 and 500 names that Mulcaire wanted to target but for which he had no numbers.

This week the culture, media and sport committee, which has reopened its 2007 phone hacking inquiry in the light of the Guardian’s revelations, will hear evidence from the Guardian.

The following week, the News International lawyer Tom Crone, and News of the World editor Colin Myler (appointed after Coulson’s resignation), will go before the MPs. The committee hopes to hear evidence from the former executive chairman of News International Les Hinton, who at the original inquiry said Goodman had been acting alone without the knowledge of News of the World executives. Hinton has yet to confirm his attendance.

Public figures and celebrities who fear they were the subjects of the phone hacking have been contacting lawyers. The Bethnal Green and Bow MP George Galloway said he was seeing if any action could be taken. The politician had clashed with the paper in 2006 when its investigations editor, Mahzer Mahmood, attempted to “sting” him at a hotel and implicate him in illegal political funding.

Rod Christie-Miller, partner at the specialist media law firm Schillings, said: “Clients are going to want to see what comes out. Sooner or later there is going to be more concrete evidence about who has been targeted.”

Christie-Miller said his firm was already suspicious that phone hacking could have been used against high-profile clients before the story broke.

“It is something we were concerned may have been happening,” he added. “We have advised clients to change settings on phones and turn off bluetooth.”

One lawyer told mediaguardian.co.uk he had advised clients to “hold their horses” to see what details emerged over the coming days but added that legal claims were “imminent”.

The report in the Sunday Times, sister paper of the News of the World, shed further light on the Gordon Taylor case.

The paper stated: “Taylor’s claim was settled when new evidence emerged out of the police files that another News of the World reporter knew how Mulcaire was obtaining some of his information,

“That reporter has since left the paper and there is no evidence he committed any offence. News International executives are not aware of any other evidence in the police files that show any other News of the World journalist was involved in commissioning Mulcaire to hack phones.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Guardian Daily: phone tapping victims speak

Broadcaster Vanessa Feltz reacts to news that her mobile phone messages were allegedly intercepted by private investigators working for the News of the World. We also hear from another victim; not a celebrity but painter and decorator Tony Harding.

Michael White assesses the mood in Westminster after the police announce there will be no new inquiry into the Guardian’s revelation that News Group Newspapers – the Rupert Murdoch company that owns the News of the World – paid £1m to keep details of its journalists’ methods secret.

Gordon Taylor, the chief executive of the Professional Footballers Association, was one of those whose phone was tapped. Among those contacting him were the football managers Sir Alex Ferguson and Alan Shearer. Media Talk presenter Matt Wells explains how widespread the practice of phone-tapping is in British journalism.

Steven Morris meets the relatives of British soldiers serving in Afghanistan, after a week of grim news.

And Maev Kennedy looks forward to a major exhibition of Vincent Van Gogh’s paintings and letters at London’s Royal Academy.


How To Spam-Proof Your Cell Phone, Inbox

Spam is the bane of computer users everywhere, accounting for more than 90 percent of e-mail. And, now, cell phones are getting spam.

LG GC990 Louvre Makes an Appearance

LG has its very own 12-megapixel phone. The LG GC990 Louvre is going to be available at some point in the future but it has decided to make an appearance. The phone will offer you neat specs like a 12.1-megapixel…

Damages paid to second NoW victim

The Guardian can disclose the identity of a second person to whom the News of the World’s owners have paid secret damages, following the hacking of her phone. She is Jo Armstrong, a legal adviser at the Professional Footballers Association.

The emergence of a second victim whose silence was effectively purchased in a sealed legal settlement, comes as News International, the tabloid’s owner, issued a statement after three days near-silence, about the hacking allegations disclosed by the Guardian.

Denying any systematic corporate policy of illegal behaviour, News International confirmed it had paid damages to Gordon Taylor, the chief executive of the Professional Footballers’ Association, who sued them for hacking into messages on his mobile phone.

The Murdoch organisation’s statement said after the Clive Goodman case “the only other evidence connecting News of the World reporters to information gained as a result of accessing a person’s voicemail emerged in April last year, during the course of the Taylor litigation.”

The Guardian understands Armstrong also sued the News of the World and is one of two other figures who received costs and damages on condition that she signed a confidentiality agreement.

Further evidence, which has been in the possession of Scotland Yard for some years, identifies a so far unnamed News of the World reporter who typed transcripts of more than 30 taped messages from the two hacking targets.

The Guardian understands the police documents name a second, senior, reporter to whom these transcripts were sent and a middle-ranking executive who offered the private investigator Glenn Mulcaire a sizeable cash bonus if he delivered the necessary facts for a News of the World exposure story.

Scotland Yard also obtained a further tape recording, sources say, on which a journalist identified only by his first name is heard receiving detailed instructions from Mulcaire to enable him to hack into Taylor’s messages himself.

Last night the Guardian said: “We are pleased that News International has, for the first time, confirmed its out-of-court settlement with Gordon Taylor … over the illegal interception of his phone messages.” The paper called for News International to authorise the release of all documents from investigations by the police as well as papers in the Taylor/Armstrong cases.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Wade: we’ll refute phone-hack claims

• Guardian ‘substantially misled’ public, claims incoming NI chief executive in letter to Commons committee chairman
• Lib Dems refer Metropolitan police phone-hacking inquiry to Independent Police Complaints Commission

Rebekah Wade, the Sun editor and soon-to-be News International chief executive, said today that company executives would refute allegations of phone hacking being a widespread practice at the News of the World when they appear before a Commons inquiry.

Wade, who takes over on 1 September as chief executive of News International, publisher of the News of the World and the UK newspaper arm of Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation, said the company would welcome the chance to appear before MPs on the Commons culture, media and sport select committee to answer questions on the Guardian’s allegations.

She said News International believed the Guardian “has substantially and likely deliberately misled the British public”.

Wade also accused the Guardian, BBC, Channel 4, ITN and Sky News of “either deliberately or recklessly” combining references to the Information Commissioner’s report about the use of private investigators by newspaper publishers, including Guardian Media Group, which also publishes MediaGuardian.co.uk, with “specific and very limited evidence” from the police investigation of illegal phone interceptions by Glen Mulcaire and former News of the World royal editor Clive Goodman.

She has written to the chairman of the Commons culture, media and sport committee, John Whittingdale, saying that the company would “refute allegations that illegal phone tapping was a widespread practice”. The News of the World editor, Colin Myler, and Tom Crone, NI’s legal counsel, will appear before the select committee at 10.30am on Tuesday 21 July.

Culture select committee representatives are understood to be locked in negotiations with former News International executive chairman Les Hinton in a bid to ensure he appears before an earlier emergency session about the News of the World phone hacking affair on Tuesday 14 July.

In her letter, Wade said: “It [the Guardian] is rushing out high volumes of coverage and repeating allegations by such sources as unnamed Met officers implying that ‘thousands’ of individuals were the object of illegal phone hacking, an assertion that is roundly contradicted by the Met Assistant Commissioner’s statement yesterday.”

On Wednesday the Guardian revealed that News Group Newspapers, the News International subsidiary that publishes the News of the World, paid out more than £1m to settle legal cases that threatened to reveal evidence of its journalists’ repeated involvement in the use of criminal methods to get stories.

The select committee said yesterday it would be calling senior managers from News International to give evidence as early as next week to clarify what they knew about malpractice by journalists at the News of the World.

The inquiry is expected to call the former News of the World editor, Andy Coulson, who is now the Conservative party’s director of communications. Coulson resigned after the News of the World royal editor Clive Goodman was jailed in 2007 for tapping the phone of members of the royal household.

Earlier today, the Liberal Democrats referred the Metropolitan Police inquiry into phone hacking by journalists at the paper to the Independent Police Complaints Commission.

Chris Huhne, the Lib Dem home office spokesman, has written to IPCC chairman Nick Hardwick asking for an inquiry into Scotland Yard’s 2006 investigation into widespread phone hacking by journalists and private investigators.

Huhne wrote to Hardwick saying that an independent inquiry was required because the Metropolitan Police “cannot act as judge and jury in its own trial”.

The Lib Dem MP added that given the “scale and scope” of the Guardian’s revelations, “the possibility that other journalists and investigators were involved must now be seriously considered”.

Yesterday Metropolitan Police assistant commissioner John Yates said no additional evidence has come to light and no further investigation was required. However, Keir Starmer QC, the director of public prosecutions, said he had ordered an “urgent examination” of material provided by the police in the News of the World case three years ago.

“The Metropolitan Police cannot act as judge and jury in its own trial. Only an independent inquiry can properly consider any possible neglect of duty by the Specialist Operations Department into the original investigation,” Huhne wrote.

“Given the scale and scope of the allegations, the possibility that other journalists and investigators were involved must now be seriously considered. The review by the director of public prosecutions is a tacit admission that the review by assistant commissioner Yates was rushed, and supports the case for a full, independent inquiry by the IPCC into the original police investigation,” he said.

“These allegations have serious implications for privacy laws and freedom of the press in this country, and as such must be investigated thoroughly. When the civil courts are recording large settlements to hush up potentially criminal activity, public authorities have a duty to investigate the matter fully.”

Former senior Scotland Yard officer Brian Paddick also called for an independent inquiry.

Paddick, the former deputy assistant commissioner at the Metropolitan Police, said there should be an independent, external review of the force’s investigation into phone-hacking.

The Met’s assistant commissioner, John Yates, said yesterday that Scotland Yard would not be reopening its files on Goodman because no new evidence had come to light and the original inquiry had concluded that phone hacking had occurred in only a minority of cases.

However, the Guardian’s allegations focus on the activities of many other journalists at the paper, drawing on separate evidence kept secret under a £1m series of deals agreed by its parent company, News International.

The former deputy prime minister, John Prescott, one of those whose phone was allegedly hacked, told the BBC’s Newsnight that Yates’s statement’s had not gone far enough.

“Frankly he has come out, he has defined in a very narrow way what he is going to look at, and then gives a report that everything is OK,” he said.

Paddick told the same programme that Yates should not be criticised for dealing with a brief referring just to the Goodman investigation. But he said Yates was not sufficiently distanced from the original investigation to launch a fresh review.

“John Yates said that he had a degree of independence because he was not involved in the initial investigation,” Paddick added.

“But he is now in charge of the department that did that initial investigtaion, so not only have we got the Metropolitan Police investigating themselves as far as this is concerned, but the department that investigated it investigating themselves.

“There must be some degree of independence here in this investigation, at least an outside force looking at it if not the Independent Police Complaints Commission.”

Mark Stephens, a lawyer at Finers Stephens Innocent, said Yates’s statement did not “address the possibility that there had been a criminal attempt or a potential criminal conspiracy”.

“I think Keir Starmer, the director of public prosecutions, will force the police to reopen this investigation,” he told Radio 4′s Today programme this morning.

Legal experts said the Yard’s decision would not affect the ability of alleged hacking victims to sue the News of the World for breach of privacy.

Stephens said several legal firms had been approached by people who thought they might have been the target of the News of the World’s activities.

“Aggrieved celebrities are contacting lawyers across London,” Stephens said. “I had two calls yesterday – one from somebody who has been identified by the Guardian as having been hacked and also the private office of somebody who believes they may have been.”

The Guardian also revealed today that the Manchester United manager, Sir Alex Ferguson, and the former Newcastle United manager Alan Shearer were among those whose private telephone messages were recorded by a private investigator working for the News of the World.

Both men are said to have left messages on the mobile phone of Gordon Taylor, the chief executive of the Professional Footballers’ Association, who sued the newspaper last year, according to sources familiar with the police investigation.

The prospect of legal action by victims comes after three fresh inquiries were launched yesterday into the conduct of News of the World journalists following the Guardian’s disclosures that Rupert Murdoch’s News Group company paid £1m to keep secret the use of apparently criminal methods to get stories.

The director of public prosecutions, Keir Starmer, ordered an urgent review of the evidence relating to phone hacking gathered in the investigation of the News of the World reporter Clive Goodman, who was jailed in January 2007 for obtaining information illegally.

A powerful Commons select committee said it would be calling senior managers from News International to give evidence as early as next week to clarify what they knew about malpractice by journalists at the News of the World.

The inquiry by the culture, media and sport select committee is expected to call the former News of the World editor, Andy Coulson, who resigned after Goodman was jailed and is now the Conservative party’s director of communications.

The Press Complaints Commission also announced it was conducting an inquiry.

David Cameron, the Conservative leader, has defended Coulson, saying he did “an excellent job in a proper, upright way”.

The parliamentary inquiry will focus on executives at News International, including Rebekah Wade, the outgoing Sun editor who has been promoted to News International chief executive; Stuart Kuttner, the News of the World’s outgoing managing editor; Colin Myler, the current News of the World editor; and Les Hinton, the former chairman of News International. Hinton left News International in December 2007 to become the New York-based chief executive of anther News Corporation subsidiary, Dow Jones, which publishes the Wall Street Journal.

John Whittingdale, the chairman of the culture select committee, said he was particularly keen to question Hinton, who told a previous hearing he was “absolutely convinced” that Goodman was the only person who knew about the phone hacking at the paper.

Whittingdale added that he was “completely shocked” that News Group had paid out more than £1m to settle cases involving illegal surveillance and said he would be asking Hinton whether he wished to amend the evidence he gave the committee then.

Another member of the committee, Labour MP Paul Farrelly, said Hinton would be asked “whether he wishes to correct, or amplify, his evidence”.

“That reopens our inquiry and, if we are not satisfied with the answers, parliament can potentially take the rare – but reputationally serious – step of finding witnesses in contempt,” he wrote on the Guardian’s Comment is Free website.

News International said last night it was “prevented by confidentiality obligations from discussing certain allegations made in the Guardian newspaper”.

The company added that its journalists had complied with relevant legislation and codes of conduct since February 2007, after the Goodman case and Coulson’s resignation.

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