The
NUJ and other media organisations have had their application for legal costs
for fighting to overturn production orders by Essex Police
for unbroadcast film of the Dale Farm evictions upheld by the High Court.
Essex
Police had attempted to force NUJ member Jason Parkinson, a freelance
video and print journalist, the BBC, ITN, BskyB and Hardcash Productions
to hand over film of the evictions.
The decision at
Chelmsford Crown Court to grant the production orders was overturned
after the union and media organisations mounted a High Court challenge and argued that they were “an excessive, unlawful
and disproportionate intrusion into the media's freedom of expression
under Article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights”.
Michelle
Stanistreet, NUJ general secretary, said: “I hope this will be a lesson
to police forces across the land to not go on fishing expeditions and
try to use the media to their job for them. The overturning of the
production order was a huge victory for the cause of press freedom and
the protection of sources and journalistic material and it is right that
the police should be made to pay for their heavy-handed decision.
"Journalists are put in danger if footage gathered whilst reporting
events is seized and used by the police. The NUJ's code of conduct
compels the union – and our members - to defend a vital principle, the
protection of journalistic sources and material. This decision is a
great victory.”
No comments:
Post a Comment