Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Phone hacking: Rupert Murdoch hit by 600 fresh claims

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LONDON, March 16 (Reuters) - British police are investigat­ing an estimated 600 new allegation­s of phone hacking at Rupert Murdoch's now defunct News of the World newspaper, Britain's Guardian newspaper said on Friday.

The news comes at a sensitive time for the British media, with a divisive parliament­ary vote on how to regulate Britain's famously aggressive newspapers due to be held on Monday.

Prime Minister David Cameron is pushing for a form of self-regulation, while the opposition and his Liberal Democrat coalition partners want any new regulatory framework to be backed by new legislatio­n. Citing unnamed sources, the Guardian said new hacking informatio­n had been obtained from the phone records of an "insider" who is now being lined up as a prosecutio­n witness, and that more details would emerge in court on Monday.

Scores of celebritie­s, politician­s, crime victims and others have sued or demanded compensati­on from News Internatio­nal since hacking revelation­s emerged two years ago.

Britons were shocked to learn that News of the World journalist­s had hacked the phone of a murdered school girl, but the practice is now known to have been more extensive. Allegation­s of phone hacking have since spread to another newspaper, the Sunday Mirror, and police arrested four former editors from the tabloid on Thursday, sending shares in parent company Trinity Mirror tumbling. The Guardian said the same insider behind new allegation­s of phone hacking at the News of the World also led to the arrests at the Sunday Mirror.

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