The |
|
The New Zealand Press Council
has declined to uphold a complaint from Colin Eade of Bryndwyr, The article dealt with
a pending appeal to the Court of Appeal by He complained of two
sentences in the article. The first referred to
the mother whose small son’s comments, the article stated, sparked the creche
inquiry, and the second, to his own role in the investigation that followed.
Mr Eade vigorously disputed the content of those two sentences, saying they
distorted the facts as he knew them. He complained about the comments to the
magazine and got no reply. He then complained in
similar terms to the Press Council. The editor of The Listener equally
vigorously defended the article in its entirety including the two sentences
complained of. He said the article’s
author had also written the 1993 article, had covered much of the court hearings
and had interviewed most of those involved. The editor said Mr Eade
seemed motivated more by resentment at the way other media had treated the
civic creche case, a point Mr Eade later denied. The editor also defended the
article as fair and accurate within its context of questioning Ellis’ guilt,
and rejected the allegations of lies and distortion. Mr Eade, in subsequent
correspondence with the Press Council, repeated his claim of deliberate lies
in the article. While apologising for
getting one point factually wrong, he nevertheless maintained his view, that
the article portrayed him and the mother whose son the article said had
sparked the case, in the worst possible light. Again the editor defended his
staff writer and the article. He said Mr Eade, as a
key officer in the case, had a vested interest in ensuring the jury found
Ellis guilty, He also said the complaint made The Listener uneasy because of
its sensitivity – he believed the Press Council was being asked to relitigate
issues still before the courts. The Council has no intention of being drawn
into that trap. Nevertheless, it has found Mr Eade’s complaint to be without
merit. Newspapers and
magazines are at liberty to opt for a questioning, even a campaigning role,
positions that The Listener had clearly adopted in this case. In so doing
they had a responsibility to present facts fairly – something the editor
accepted. But they were also free
to present facts, in such a way as to make a case for the questions they were
posing, or the campaign they were mounting. The Council could not sustain Mr
Eade’s claims of deliberate lying or distortions, and suggested he might have
pursued an altogether simpler course in making his displeasure known: he
might have offered The Listener a letter for publication, a route the
magazine itself could have commended to him. The complaint is not upheld. |