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BBC's Andrew Marr 'embarrassed' by super-injunction
Topic Started: Apr 26 2011, 09:29 AM (470 Views)
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BBC presenter Andrew Marr has revealed he took out a super-injunction to protect his family's privacy - but says he will not pursue it any further.

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Mr Marr told the Daily Mail he was "embarrassed" about the gagging order he took out in 2008 to suppress reports of an affair with a fellow journalist.

"I did not come into journalism to go around gagging journalists," he said.

Mr Marr's comments follow a number of recent injunctions which have banned the identification of celebrities.

The use of injunctions seemed to be "running out of control," he added.

In his interview in the Mail, Mr Marr confirmed he had taken out an injunction to prevent details about the affair, which happened eight years ago while he was BBC political editor, from being published.

At the time he believed he had fathered a child with the woman, but later found through a DNA test that this was not the case.

He said: "Am I embarrassed by it? Yes. Am I uneasy about it? Yes."

But he added: "I also had my own family to think about, and I believed this story was nobody else's business."

Mr Marr - who hosts a Sunday politics show on BBC One - went on to say he knew injunctions were "controversial, and the situation seems to be running out of control".

"There is a case for privacy in a limited number of difficult situations, but then you have to move on. They shouldn't be forever and a proper sense of proportion is required," he said.

Last week, Prime Minister David Cameron said he felt "uneasy" about judges granting injunctions to protect the privacy of powerful individuals.

He warned that judges were using human rights legislation "to deliver a sort of privacy law" and argued that Parliament, not judges, should decide on the balance between press freedom and privacy.

The editor of Private Eye, Ian Hislop, originally challenged the injunction after Mr Marr wrote what he called a "touch hypocritical" piece saying privacy law should not be determined by judges but by parliament. He challenged it again last week.

"As a leading BBC interviewer, who's asking politicians about failures in judgement, failures in their private lives, inconsistencies, it was pretty rank of him to have an injunction when acting as an active journalist," Mr Hislop told BBC Radio 4's Today programme.

"I think he knows that and I'm very pleased that he has actually come forward and said I can no longer do this."

Press freedom

BBC media correspondent Torin Douglas said Mr Marr's decision was unlikely to influence others.

"He's a special case. Because he is a journalist he felt particularly embarrassed. Others are not in the position where they think the freedom of the press is more important than privacy," he said.

Our correspondent said there were about 30 super-injunctions currently in place, but by their very nature no-one really knew for certain.

Last Wednesday, High Court judge Mr Justice Eady agreed to issue a "contra mundum" order - effectively a worldwide ban - in the case of a man who sought to prevent publication of material about his private life.

Such orders were previously used to stop the publication of details about the killers of James Bulger, when a court ruled that there was a "strong possibility" that their lives would be at risk if they were identified.

A contra mundum order is intended to apply forever, and applies to everyone - as opposed to forbidding the publication of details by a specific newspaper or journalist.

In a separate case, a married Premier League footballer who reportedly had an affair with Big Brother's Imogen Thomas, won the right to continue his anonymity.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-13190424
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