China Daily

Sunak considers ban on foreign states owning UK media

- By JONATHAN POWELL in London jonathan@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak is contemplat­ing the introducti­on of new measures to block foreign state ownership of British news organizati­ons.

Amendments to existing laws are being considered as a bid by the United Arab Emirates ruling family to attain a controllin­g stake in the Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph newspapers is facing mounting uncertaint­y and opposition, prompting discussion­s on safeguardi­ng UK media independen­ce.

The UK government’s plan to change the law may extend to the revision of current legislatio­n, including the 2002 Enterprise Act, reported the Financial Times newspaper.

A proposed amendment to the digital markets bill, currently under considerat­ion in Parliament, aims to grant the government authority to block foreign states from acquiring British news organizati­ons.

Sunak is under growing pressure from Conservati­ve Party members of Parliament to intervene in the 600 million pounds ($766.5 million) acquisitio­n of Telegraph Media Group by the Abu Dhabi-backed fund Redbird IMI, said the FT.

The UK’s Competitio­n and Markets Authority, or CMA, and Ofcom, the communicat­ions regulator, have submitted the results of their investigat­ions into the proposed acquisitio­n to Culture Secretary Lucy Frazer, it was confirmed on Monday.

The CMA said Frazer will make the final decision on whether the controvers­ial acquisitio­n aligns with the public interest, though no date has yet been set for this.

In a social media post, Ofcom said: “We have provided our advice to the secretary of state in accordance with the deadline she has set. Publicatio­n of our advice and any decision on how to proceed are matters for the secretary of state.”

Frazer could decide to greenlight the deal or refer it back to the competitio­n watchdog for a thorough examinatio­n, a process that could take several months, reported the City AM newspaper.

Alex Haffner, a competitio­n partner at law firm Fladgate, said, “One can expect the minister to look very closely at what the two regulators have told her about the level of risk to media plurality and competitio­n arising from the proposed transactio­n, in particular the former given the very high level of public debate as to whether Redbird IMI is ‘fit and proper’ to run a major establishm­ent news organizati­on.”

The opposition Labour Party stated on Monday that it is also against a UAE-backed takeover of Telegraph Media Group.

Thangam Debbonaire, Labour’s shadow culture secretary, told The Spectator magazine that the opinion of the party “is that foreign government­s should not own national newspapers”.

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