Wednesday 6 July 2011

Phone Hacking.

We all know only to well the pain we go through when someone we love dies. It is a pain so strong we often don't think that we can carry on.

Fewer of us know the pain of a child going missing. Many parents have had the fright of their lives when their child has wondered off in a shop and they can not find them for a few minutes. The panic that builds up inside them in that short time must be immense. But in some cases when a person goes missing or is kidnapped the family are left in limbo, not knowing what has happened to their loved one, terrified that the next knock at the door will be a police officer bringing them the worst news imaginable.

And what about the hundreds of people who left their homes on July 7th 2005 and started their commute into London. That morning 52 commuters didn't get to their offices and families were left heart broken.

Being a journalist at times like these can be tricky. You want and need a story so you can inform the nation what is happening and allow everyone to become familiar with a missing persons face in the hope that someone will see them and provide the police with some new information.

Quite often a journalist will have to try to talk to a member of the family. I can imagine that this would be very hard. Journalists are offered guidance for this situation in Clause 5 of the PCC editors code which states:

"In cases involving personal grief or shock, enquiries and approaches must be made with sympathy and discretion and publication handled sensitively. This should not restrict the right to report legal proceedings, such as inquests."

I woke up to the news this morning that the families of the people who lost their lives in the horrific 7/7 bombings may have had their phones hacked. We have also heard that the parents of Holly Wells, Jessica Chapman and Milly Dowler have had their privacy invaded at the hardest time in their lives.

As a journalist I understand the importance of following the stories of missing people and terrorist attacks but to obtain information and fill the families minds and hearts with false hope as in the case of Milly Dowler is sick.

A statement made by Rupert Murdoch can be found on the News of the World website. In it he states:

"Recent allegations of phone hacking and making payments to police with respect to the News of the World are deplorable and unacceptable. "

I fear the the phone handle scandal is only just starting and, like the expenses scandal, there are many more cases to be revealed. I am often proud and excited to be training to be a journalist but, to be associated with the handful of people who feel it is acceptable to intrude on a persons privacy in such a disgraceful way has left me feeling a little different. It is a shame that the actions of a handful of people in the industry have left the nation feeling this way about all journalists.