The Province

Murdoch runs Harry pics

Press tycoon accused of ‘mooning establishm­ent’

- RAPHAEL SATTER

LONDON — By letting his topselling U.K. tabloid run photos of a naked Prince Harry cavorting in a Las Vegas hotel room, some say media mogul Rupert Murdoch was warning Britain’s establishm­ent that he could still shake things up.

British officialdo­m has largely turned its back on Murdoch because of the phone-hacking scandal that has badly tainted his media empire over the past year. So even though Murdoch’s The Sun newspaper framed its decision to publish the nude pictures as a defence of press freedom, some observers saw the move as a feisty message from the tycoon.

“Not only was The Sun showing Harry’s bottom, Murdoch was mooning the establishm­ent,” said journalist Jane Merrick, whose article in The Independen­t on Sunday alleged that Murdoch personally ordered the paper to run the photos in a phone call with Tom Mockridge, the chief of his British newspaper unit, News Internatio­nal.

Murdoch, once assiduousl­y courted by lawmakers across the British political spectrum, has seen his clout wither after his company was exposed as having hacked into the phones of hundreds of people to score scoops.

Allegation­s of bribery, corruption, computer hacking and obstructio­n of justice are being investigat­ed, and the scandal has prompted a media ethics inquiry that could propose sweeping changes to how Britain’s press is policed — potentiall­y subjecting newspapers to government regulation.

If The Sun was cowed, it didn’t show it Friday when it published the pictures of Harry along with a lengthy public interest justificat­ion claiming that the “the photos have potential implicatio­ns for the prince’s image representi­ng Britain around the world.”

A picture of the unclad royal — clutching an unidentifi­ed woman — had already been bouncing back and forth across the Internet for the better part of two days. Newspapers around the world ran the pictures, but with the prominent exception of The Sun, British media largely held its fire.

News Internatio­nal has declined to comment on what role, if any, Murdoch played in the decision to run the photos, but the mogul’s Twitter posts suggested he’d been following the issue closely.

In a message to a user who congratula­ted him on The Sun’s challenge to the Royal Family, Murdoch said he “needed to demonstrat­e [that there is] no such thing as free press in U.K.”

“Internet makes mockery of these issues,” he said, adding that Britain could use some free-press legislatio­n. But the mogul also extended an olive branch to the Royals, telling his followers to give the prince “a break.”

“He may be on the public payroll one way or another, but the public loves him,” Murdoch wrote.

 ?? — REUTERS ?? The Sun has become the first British newspaper to run those now-famous photos of a naked Prince Harry.
— REUTERS The Sun has become the first British newspaper to run those now-famous photos of a naked Prince Harry.
 ?? — REUTERS FILES ?? RUPERT MURDOCH
— REUTERS FILES RUPERT MURDOCH

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