Leveson Inquiry: Call for statutory right of reply if newspapers print inaccurate information

THE public should have a statutory “right of reply” if newspapers print inaccurate information about them, the Leveson inquiry was told today.

The Co-ordinating Committee for Media Reform told the inquiry into journalistic ethics that in “serious cases” the reply should be given the same prominence as the original article.

Members of the committee - an organisation which co-ordinates work by academics and media campaigners - gave evidence as inquiry chairman Lord Justice Leveson considered ways of regulating newspapers.

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“A statutory right of reply should be introduced applying to any person who has been directly mentioned in an article,” said committee chairman James Curran in a written statement to the inquiry.

“In particularly serious cases... the right of reply should be offered with the same prominence, and in the same position, as the original article.”

Professor Curran said the right of reply should be available to anyone named in print or online who wished to correct a “clear factual inaccuracy”.

“When information is inaccurate, unfair, or just ‘made up’, real people are affected and they should have a right to correct misleading statements,” he said.

“By insisting on a qualified, enforceable right of reply, the British news media would be immediately opened up to alternative points of view, with a minimum of disruption to existing practices.

“And we should not underestimate the size of this problem or the distress it causes. The Press Complaints Commission’s statistics show that in 2009, 87.2% of the complaints it received concerned accuracy and opportunity to reply.”