Oman Daily Observer

UK policeman, four tabloid staff arrested

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LONDON — Detectives investigat­ing the suspected payment of police for informatio­n yesterday arrested a serving policeman and four staff from Britain’s biggest selling daily newspaper, Rupert Murdoch’s The Sun.

The investigat­ion is linked to the police probe into phone-hacking at The Sun’s former stablemate, the News of the World, which Murdoch shut down in July following revelation­s that hundreds of public figures had been targeted.

London’s Metropolit­an Police said it had arrested five people, including a 29-yearold from the force’s Territoria­l Policing command, and had also searched the offices in Wapping, east London, where The Sun is based.

In a separate statement, Murdoch’s News Corporatio­n confirmed the other four men arrested either worked or used to work at The Sun, adding that the detentions were prompted by informatio­n it had provided to police.

Thirteen people have now been arrested under Operation Elveden, the police investigat­ion into allegation­s that journalist­s paid officers for informatio­n.

It was sparked by concerns about the working practices of the British press after the News of the World scandal and runs alongside Operation Weeting, the probe into phone hacking under which 17 arrests have so far been made.

The scandal at the News of the World erupted in July when it emerged that journalist­s had listened to the voicemails not just of celebritie­s and politician­s but also a murdered schoolgirl, Milly Dowler.

Amid public outrage, Murdoch closed down 168-year-old weekly and set up a committee to review all its British titles for evidence of wrongdoing.

“News Corporatio­n made a commitment last summer that unacceptab­le news gathering practices by individual­s in the past would not be repeated,” the Us-based company said in a statement yesterday.

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