Showing posts with label Murdoch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Murdoch. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Murdoch drops bid for British Sky Broadcasting

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LONDON (AP) — Rupert Murdoch's dream of controlling a British broadcasting behemoth evaporated Wednesday as he withdrew his bid for BSkyB — the latest, biggest casualty of what Prime Minister David Cameron called the hacking "firestorm" sweeping through British politics, media and police.

Cameron appointed a senior judge to lead an inquiry into the phone hacking and police bribery scandal engulfing Murdoch's British newspapers, and promised it would investigate whether Murdoch's reporters sought the phone numbers of 9/11 victims in their quest for sensational scoops.

"There is a firestorm, if you like, that is engulfing parts of the media, parts of the police, and indeed our political system's ability to respond," Cameron said Wednesday in the House of Commons.

"What we must do in the coming days and weeks is think above all of the victims ... to make doubly sure that we get to the bottom of this and that we prosecute those who are responsible," he said.

As lawmakers from all the country's main parties united to demand that Murdoch's News Corp. withdraw its bid for British Sky Broadcasting, the media magnate bowed to the inevitable, accepting that he could not win government approval for the multibillion dollar takeover.

"It has become clear that it is too difficult to progress in this climate," News Corp. deputy chairman and president Chase Carey said in a brief statement to the London Stock Exchange.

Shares in BSkyB fell 4 percent after the announcement, but rebounded as uncertainty about the company's immediate future was lifted and closed 2 percent higher.

Murdoch had hoped to gain control of the 61 percent of BSkyB shares that he doesn't already own. The takeover — potentially his biggest, most lucrative acquisition — appeared certain to succeed just over a week ago, despite concerns about the size of Murdoch's hefty share of the British media market.

But the deal unraveled with stunning speed after a rival newspaper reported that Murdoch's News of the World tabloid had hacked into the phone of teenage murder victim Milly Dowler in 2002 and may have impeded a police investigation into the 13-year-old's disappearance.

What had for several years been a trickle of allegations by people who claimed to have been hacked by the paper — from celebrities like Sienna Miller and Jude Law to politicians including former Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott — became a torrent. Potential victims swelled to include other child murder victims, 2005 London bombing victims and the families of dead British soldiers.

News Corp. responded by killing off the 168-year-old weekly newspaper, which published its final issue on Sunday. Murdoch flew to London in a desperate scramble to keep the BSkyB bid alive.

But still the allegations mounted. Former Prime Minister Gordon Brown claimed his bank details and the medical records of his young son, who has cystic fibrosis, had been obtained by other Murdoch papers.

The Daily Mirror newspaper, a rival to Murdoch's The Sun tabloid, claimed that a reporter for a Murdoch paper may have sought the phone numbers of victims of the Sept. 11 attacks in the United States.

Politicians from all parties, who for more than three decades have sought the approval of the Murdoch press, finally abandoned him.

"The terrible revelations of the last week have shaken us all," Labour Party leader Ed Miliband said in parliament Wednesday. "The events of the last seven days have opened all our eyes and given us the chance to say: It doesn't have to be like this."

Wednesday's debate centered on a motion declaring that Murdoch's bid for BSkyB would not be in the national interest. All three main parties had vowed to back the nonbinding motion.

The debate went ahead after Murdoch withdrew his bid, and the motion was approved without a formal vote, in a chorus of "ayes."

News Corp. lost several billion dollars in market value after the scandal broke last week, but its shares rallied after the company said Tuesday that it was buying back $5 billion of its own shares. Shares rose 71 cents, or 4.6 percent, to $16.06 in afternoon trading in New York.

For Murdoch, it was a dramatic reversal. For three decades, the Murdoch media empire has had near-mythic powers among British politicians to destroy careers and determine the result of elections. After the Conservatives triumphed in the 1992 election, the Sun blared in a front-page headline "It's the Sun wot won it" — and few doubted that it was true.

Steven Barnett, communications professor at the University of Westminster, said Murdoch's retreat signaled a new era in British political life.

"This means the British Parliament has discovered its spine," he said. "After 30 years of successive governments caving in to powerful media corporations, finally Parliament has realized it has to take a stand."

It was a bitter irony for Murdoch that it was the News of the World, his first British acquisition in 1969, that sabotaged his ambitions to control the nation's most profitable broadcaster.

Its ramifications for News Corp. and its executives — particularly Murdoch's son James, head of News Corp.'s European and Asian operations, and the chief of its British division, Rebekah Brooks — are still playing out.

The scandal claimed a senior casualty Wednesday as News International, the company's British unit, said its legal director, Tom Crone, had left the company. Crone led an internal inquiry that concluded only two people at News of the World had been involved in phone hacking — a stance that collapsed as numerous revelations tumbled out this year.

Cameron has struggled to control a spiraling scandal that includes his own former communications chief, Andy Coulson — an ex-News of the World editor — being arrested. The prime minister announced he was putting senior judge Brian Leveson in charge of an inquiry into phone hacking and alleged police bribery by the tabloid.

The inquiry will be able to compel witnesses — including government figures — to give evidence under oath.

Leveson will first investigate the culture, practices and ethics of the press, its relationship with police and the failure of the current system of self-regulation. The judge said the inquiry would begin "as soon as possible," but that its second phase, examining what went wrong at the News of the World, would have to wait until the criminal investigation is complete.

Police are pursuing two investigations of News International, one on phone hacking and the other on allegations that News of the World bribed police officers for information. Police have indicated the bribery investigations involve about half a dozen officers.

Detectives have arrested eight people so far in their hacking investigation, including Coulson. No one has been charged. Cameron said police had the names of more than 3,700 potential victims, and would be contacting them all.

The allegation that Murdoch papers may have targeted 9/11 victims comes from the Mirror, which quoted an anonymous source as saying an unidentified American investigator had rejected approaches from unidentified journalists who showed a particular interest in British victims of the terror attacks. It cited no evidence that any phone had actually been hacked.

In Washington, Sen. Jay Rockefeller, a Democrat from West Virginia, urged an investigation into whether News Corp. had violated U.S. law because of the British paper's activities.

If there was any phone hacking of Americans "the consequences will be severe," said Rockefeller, chairman of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation.

A report Wednesday in The Wall Street Journal, which is part of News Corp., said Murdoch met with advisers in recent weeks to discuss possible options, including the sale of his remaining British newspapers — The Sun, The Times and The Sunday Times. The Journal, citing unidentified people familiar with the situation, said there didn't appear to be any buyers given the poor economics of the newspaper division.

A defiant mood was evident at The Sun, which slapped the headline "Brown Wrong" across its front page in response to the former prime minister's claims the paper had obtained confidential medical records of his 4-year-old son Fraser.

The newspaper insisted it learned of the boy's ailment from the father of another child with the same condition, and that it contacted the Browns, who consented to the story.

On Wednesday, Brown accused Murdoch's media empire of "lawbreaking often on an industrial scale."

Speaking in the House of Commons, he said victims saw "their private, innermost feelings and their private tears bought and sold by News International for commercial gain."

"News International descended from the gutter to the sewer," Brown said.

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Associated Press writers Bob Barr, Cassandra Vinograd and Gregory Katz in London contributed to this report.

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Jill Lawless can be reached at http://twitter.com/JillLawless

Murdoch drops bid for British Sky Broadcasting

LONDON (AP) — in a stunning retreat decreased Rupert Murdoch's News Corp's bid Wednesday to take full control of the British Sky Broadcasting over what the Prime Minister called a political and media "firestorm" over phone hacking at a the media baron's U.K. newspapers.

Murdoch stepped back from potentially makes his biggest, most lucrative acquisitions, to accept that he cannot win the British Government's approval of the takeover because the country's main political parties had united against it.

"It has become apparent that it is too difficult to make progress in this climate," said News Corp Vice-President and Chairman Chase Carey in a brief statement to the London Stock Exchange.

Shares in BSkyB showed 4 percent lower after the announcement, but released as uncertainty about the company's immediate future was lifted, closing 2 percent higher.

Hours earlier, Prime minister David Cameron announced he was putting a higher judge in charge of an inquiry phone hacking and alleged police bribery by one of Murdoch's British tabloids, the News of the World. The British leader also promised to investigate an allegation that reporter U.K. can have searched phone number of the 9/11 terror victims in a quest for sensational scoops.

"It is a firestorm, if you like, the uppslukar parts of the media, part of the police, and even our political system's ability to respond," said Cameron in the House of Commons. He said must now focus on the victims — police say they will contact over 3 700 people in probe – and ensure that those responsible are prosecuted.

It is a bitter irony of Murdoch that News of the World, his first British acquisitions 1969, sabotaged his ambitions to control the country's most profitable broadcaster.

The Media baron had to close down the 168-year-old muckraking tabloid Sunday and flew to London in a desperate scramble to keep the BSkyB bid alive. Murdoch had hoped to gain control of the 61% of BSkyB shares his News Corp does not already own.

"Thought it was incomprehensible that Mr. Murdoch could continue its takeover after these revelations," said Labour leader Ed Miliband.

Anger has grown and Murdoch's News Corp. 's share price has fallen since a report last week that News of the World had hacked into the phone murders victim Milly Dowler teenage 2002 and may have hindered the police investigation into her disappearance. Followed by data on intrusions into private records of Murdoch's other U.K. papers, the Sun and The Sunday Times.

Police have arrested eight people so far in their investigation, including Cameron's former Communications Director Andy Coulson, former editor of the News of the World. No one has been charged.

Lawmakers held an hour long debate on the scandal Wednesday who had been on the end of a vote on a motion to declare that Murdoch's bid for full control of BSkyB would not be in the national interest. All three main parties had pledged to back the parking card proposal.

The debate went ahead after Murdoch withdrew its bid, but it was unclear whether lawmakers would still vote.

Miliband told legislators that the scrapping of the BSkyB bid was "a victory for the people – United Kingdom upset of betrayal of trust of parts of our newspaper industry good, decent people."

"Make mistakes – the decisions taken by News Corp. was not the decision that they wanted to do," he said.

The scandal cost another media executives their jobs Wednesday. News International, the British unit of News Corp., said the legal Director, Tom Crone, left the company. Crone had led an internal investigation that concluded only two people at the News of the World had been involved in phone hacking of celebrities, politicians, top athletes and murder victims – a stance that collapsed as many revelations came out this year.

Dowlers family met Cameron at 10 Downing Street on Wednesday. Mark Lewis, a lawyer for the family, said they were happy that politicians responded "so quickly in response to public outrage."

Cameron was appointed Lord Justice Brian Leveson to lead the inquiry, which will be able to force witnesses – including Government numbers — to testify under oath.

Leveson will first examine the culture, practices and ethics in the press, its relationship to the police and the failure of the current system of self-regulation. This inquiry is expected to last up to one year. Only then will the investigation focus changed to what went wrong at the news of the world, and other documents, Cameron said.

The judge said some aspects of his work would have to wait until criminal investigation is complete.

"The press gives a fundamental control of all aspects of public life. That is why each error in the media affects us all, "said Leveson. "The focus of this study, therefore may be a simple question: who guards the guardians?"

The proposal that the 9/11 victims may have been directed appeared Monday in the mirror, a British competitor to Sun. It quoted an anonymous source as saying an unidentified American investigators had rejected approaches from unidentified journalists showed a particular interest in British victims of terror attacks. There is no evidence that any phone actually had been hacked.

Washington urged older Jay Rockefeller, a Democrat from West Virginia, an investigation into whether Murdoch's News Corp. had violated u.s. law due to the British paper activities.

If there was no hacking of telephones belonging to 9/11 victims or other Americans, "the consequences are serious," said Rockefeller, Chairman of the Senate Committee on Commerce, science and transportation.

A report Wednesday in The Wall Street Journal, which is part of News Corp., said Murdoch has met with advisers over the last few weeks to discuss the possible options, including the sale of its remaining British newspapers--the Sun, The Times and The Sunday Times. The journal can evaluate unidentified people familiar with the situation, said there appears to be no buyers in view of the newspaper division bad economics.

A defiant mood was still clear at a News International paper, the Sun tabloid, who slapped the heading "Brown errors" on its front page Wednesday in response to claims by former Prime minister Gordon Brown that the paper had received confidential medical records of his younger son.

Brown accused Murdoch's papers, including the Sun and The Sunday Times, in order to have their confidential bank accounts, tax records and health information on his son, Fraser, suffering from cystic fibrosis, using fraudulent means criminal. But the newspaper insisted it learned of the boy's pain from the father of another child with the same conditions, and that it contacted the Browns, who have agreed to that history.

"We are not aware of Mr. Brown, or any of his colleagues as we talked, making any complaints about it on time," Sun said.

Police in the United Kingdom is conducting two studies of News International, a phone hacking and the other on allegations that News of the World bribed police information.

Hugh Orde, President of the Association of Chief Police officers, called News International will clean of any payments.

"If they have names, dates, times, locations, payments to officers, we would like to see them so that we can lock these officers and throw away the key," Orde told the British Broadcasting radio.

Police officials have specified bribery investigations involving about half a dozen officers.

London Mayor Boris Johnson said Wednesday that he had been told that his phone had been chopped but he decided not to take legal action.

"Why on earth should I go through some legal cases where it would have inevitably involved go through all the pathetic so-called revelations as News of the World had dug up?" Johnson said.

Murdoch, was rescued in Parliament, dropped the BSkyB bid

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LONDON (Reuters) - Rupert Murdoch withdrew his bid for British broadcaster BSkyB on Wednesday in the face of cross-party hostility in parliament following allegations of widespread criminality at one of his tabloid newspapers.

The move pre-empted by a couple of hours a planned vote in parliament that had all-party support for a non-binding motion urging the Australian-born media magnate to drop a buyout offer which was a major part of his global expansion in television

"News Corp announces that it no longer intends to make an offer for the entire issued and to be issued share capital of ... BSkyB not already owned by it," the U.S.-listed parent of the global media empire said.

News Corp owns 39 percent of BSkyB, which owns Sky News and a range of profitable pay-TV channels.

"It has become clear that it is too difficult to progress in this climate," deputy chairman Chase Carey said in a statement, adding that News Corp would remain "a committed long-term shareholder."

Prime Minister David Cameron, who has faced awkward questions about his own relations with Murdoch, welcomed the news: "The business should focus on clearing up the mess and getting its own house in order," he said through a spokesman.

Opposition Labour leader Ed Miliband said it was a victory for those who had opposed the extension of Murdoch's power.

Earlier, Cameron told parliament Murdoch should drop the bid while police investigated allegations that the News of the World hacked the voicemails of thousands of people looking for stories and also bribed police officers for information.

The press baron, who for decades has been both feared and courted by British politicians of all parties, shut down the 168-year-old Sunday tabloid last week in an effort to stem the scandal and save the BSkyB bid. But there was no stopping the flow of allegations and it had looked politically untenable.

Summoning a degree of national unity rarely seen outside times of war, all parties were due to endorse a motion later on Wednesday in parliament that was to urge Murdoch to drop it. It was unclear if that formal vote would now go ahead, after hours of debate in which hostility to Murdoch was unanimous.

GOVERNMENT OPPOSITION

The four-sentence statement, highlighting News Corp's commitment to BSkyB, leaves the door open to a new offer to buy out the other shareholders at some point in the future, although many months of police investigation and a public inquiry will keep the scandal alive for a good time yet.

Chris Marangi, portfolio manager at Gabelli Multimedia Funds, which holds shares in News Corp, said: "This is not surprising, it doesn't mean the desire's not there.

"It's politically savvy, and he needs to buy his time and let this blow over ... At the time, it's circle the wagons and protect existing operations."

Several former employees of Murdoch's British newspaper unit News International have been arrested this year after police reopened inquiries which they had dropped in 2007 following the conviction of the News of the World's royal correspondent.

Those under suspicion of phone hacking and of bribing police include former editor Andy Coulson, whom Cameron hired as his spokesman in 2007 after the hacking scandal first broke. Coulson left the prime minister's office in January and, like other News of the World staff, denies knowing of any wrongdoing.

In the most senior departure from the organization since Coulson, the legal manager of News International, Tom Crone, has left the company, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters. He has been closely involved in the company's defense.

That for years consisted of blaming the "rogue reporter" jailed in 2007 but has shifted to accept possibly wider problems since police renewed their investigation under public pressure.

Cameron told a stormy weekly questions session in parliament that Murdoch should drop the bid: "What has happened at the company is disgraceful. It's got to be addressed at every level and they should stop thinking about mergers when they've got to sort out the mess they've created."

Facing new questions about why he hired Coulson, Cameron repeated that he had believed his assurances of innocence. But he warned that his former aide, if found to have lied to him, "should like others face the full force of the law."

Giving details of a formal public inquiry into the affair, to be chaired by a senior judge, Brian Leveson, Cameron said that senior executives, however high in the Murdoch organization, should be barred for life from the British media if found to have taken part in any wrongdoing.

Cameron has previously said Rebekah Brooks, Coulson's predecessor at the News of the World and now Murdoch's close aide as chief executive of News International, should quit. Brooks has been a frequent guest at Cameron's country home.

MURDOCH POWER

While some analysts said it was too early to declare that his business was in serious retreat in Britain, many said that the sweeping political influence Murdoch had enjoyed over both left and right in politics seemed most suddenly curtailed.

Support for a motion put forward by the Labour opposition was solid across the normally bitter divides of the House of Commons, including from Cameron's Conservatives who had, previously, given their blessing to the BSkyB takeover.

"For decades now, successive prime ministers have cozied up to Murdoch," said politics professor Jonathan Tonge of Liverpool University. "Now it's a new era.

"Political leaders will be falling over themselves to avoid close contact with media conglomerates. This is a turning of the tide -- it's parliament versus Murdoch at the moment."

Others, however, were cautious.

"In the medium to longer term, the natural order will reassert itself," said Steven Fielding, politics professor at Nottingham University. "People will forget what the News of the World did ... and that people's desire for tittle tattle, regardless of how it is found, will remain.

"Ultimately there's a reason why politicians sucked up to Rupert Murdoch and to others ... They inherently need to get on well with the press."

News Corp's share price has fallen sharply, and the company has extended a share buyback scheme. Some investors have renewed calls for the Murdoch family to cut emotional ties to struggling newspapers on which their empire was built in order to focus on expansion in television and other media.

News Corp shares rallied some 1.7 percent after the $12-billion bid was pulled. BSkyB shares, which have lost a fifth of their value in a week, edged another 0.4 percent lower.

INTERNATIONAL FALLOUT

The fallout from the scandal threatens to spread to the United States, where Murdoch owns The Wall Street Journal, the New York Post and Fox television. John Rockefeller, chairman of Senate's commerce committee, called for an investigation to determine if News Corp had broken any U.S. laws.

Rockefeller said he was concerned by allegations that the hacking of cellphone voicemails, acknowledged in London by News Corp, "may have extended to 9/11 victims or other Americans," in which case he said "the consequences will be severe."

In Australia, birthplace of the Murdoch business, the head of the local unit News Limited said it was launching an internal inquiry but insisted he had "absolutely no reason to suspect any wrongdoing" of the kind seen in Britain.

Cameron on Wednesday met the parents of Milly Dowler, a 13-year-old girl abducted and murdered in 2002, whose cellphone is alleged to have been hacked by the News of the World.

It was that revelation in a rival newspaper last week which shocked the nation and drove events forward amid a whirlwind of further allegations. These included that the phones of parents of soldiers killed in combat and those of the victims of the July 2005 London suicide bombings were also targeted.

Cameron said he wanted to pledge to the Dowlers that all the political parties would act to close this "ugly chapter."

Many politicians believe that journalistic misdeeds have not been restricted to News International. Allegations surfaced this week of possible phone hacking by other tabloids and police raided the offices of the Daily Star last week.

That has increased pressure for formal regulation of the British press which, while restricted by draconian defamation laws, is otherwise subject to a voluntary code of conduct.

Murdoch, his son James and Rebekah Brooks, the former News of the World editor who is now chief executive at News International have been summoned to answer questions by a legislative parliamentary committee next week.

As a U.S. citizen, Murdoch need not attend.

(Additional reporting by Keith Weir, Mohammed Abbas, Michael Holden and Jodie Ginsberg; Writing by Alastair Macdonald; Editing by Jon Hemming)