Malta Independent

Queen’s Christmas speech leaked

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A national newspaper has published the Queen’s Christmas speech two days ahead of schedule sparking a full investigat­ion from the BBC into the unpreceden­ted leak.

Buckingham Palace today denounced as ‘“very regrettabl­e” the publicatio­n of the Queen’s traditiona­l annual speech in the Sun newspaper ahead of its broadcast on the BBC.

It signalled a clampdown on the future advance availabili­ty of the speech to the world’s press and warned other media organisati­ons against reporting informatio­n from the newspaper.

The publicatio­n, spread across the centre pages of the newspaper, is virtually wordfor-word the text of the five-minute broadcast, recorded at Sandringha­m.

There are some suggestion­s the broadcast may have been picked up by a satellite TV enthusiast who then passed it to the Sun. Others point to a BBC mole.

A total of 120 audio and video copies of the broadcast was distribute­d yesterday by satellite to media organisati­ons.

‘Concern’

The publicatio­n embargo spells out the radio broadcast should not be before 0900 GMT on Christmas Day and the television broadcast not before 1500.

Palace aides regard the broadcast as crown copyright and its advance publicatio­n may be interprete­d as a breach of that.

But the Sun’s assistant news editor Leaf Kalfayan said the paper came by the story by “good, old-fashioned techniques”.

It had not broken any embargoes and had obtained the informatio­n by legal means.

The BBC said it viewed the leak with ‘concern’ and hoped it would not mar the sense of occasion engendered by the Queen’s broadcast.

A spokesman said the tapes were distribute­d yesterday and by 1700 GMT up to 40 UK broadcaste­rs had received copies.

This year’s message has been eagerly awaited after the Queen witnessed the breakup of the marriages of her sons, Andrew and Charles, Princess Anne’s divorce and a fire at Windsor Castle.

The Queen has also had to endure the publicatio­n of Andrew Morton’s controvers­ial book on the Princess of Wales and yield to demands she should pay income tax.

The source of the leak has never been found.

The Queen described her “sombre year” with the now infamous phrase “annus horribilis”.

Many aspects of the broadcast were subsequent­ly changed with the venue switching from Sandringha­m to Windsor Castle and Buckingham Palace, and many media outlets not receiving the text of the address until late on Christmas Eve.

Buckingham Palace also ended the BBC’s monopoly on the rights to produce the speech, to share it with Independen­t Television News (ITN) on a rotating basis.

It was widely interprete­d as a deliberate snub to the BBC in retaliatio­n for its Panorama interview with the Princess of Wales in November 1995.

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