Craig Murray’s jailing is the latest move in a
battle to snuff out independent journalism
By Jonathan Cook
August 01, 2021: "Information
Clearing House" --- Craig Murray, a former ambassador to
Uzbekistan, the father of a newborn child, a man in
very poor health and one who has no prior
convictions, will have to hand himself over to the
Scottish police on Sunday morning. He becomes the
first person ever to be imprisoned on the obscure
and vaguely defined charge of “jigsaw
identification”.
Murray is also the first person to be jailed in
Britain for contempt of court for their journalism
in half a century – a period when such different
legal and moral values prevailed that the British
establishment had only just ended the prosecution of
“homosexuals” and the jailing of women for having
abortions.
📢PRESS RELEASE: Craig Murray to be first person incarcerated in the UK over media contempt case in 50 years, setting dangerous legal precedent for freedom of speech and equality before the law.
— Craig Murray Justice campaign (@cmurrayjustice) July 29, 2021
Murray’s imprisonment for eight months by Lady
Dorrian, Scotland’s second most senior judge, is of
course based entirely on a keen reading of Scottish
law rather than evidence of the Scottish and London
political establishments seeking revenge on the
former diplomat. And the UK supreme court’s refusal
on Thursday to hear Murray’s appeal despite many
glaring legal anomalies in the case, thereby
paving his path to jail, is equally rooted in a
strict application of the law, and not influenced in
any way by political considerations.
Murray’s jailing has nothing to do with the fact
that he embarrassed the British state in the early
2000s by becoming that rarest of things: a
whistleblowing diplomat. He exposed the British
government’s collusion, along with the US, in
Uzbekistan’s torture regime.
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His jailing also has nothing to do with the fact
that Murray has embarrassed the British state more
recently by reporting the woeful and continuing
legal abuses in a London courtroom as Washington
seeks to extradite Wikileaks’ founder, Julian
Assange, and lock him away for life in a maximum
security prison. The US wants to make an example of
Assange for exposing its war crimes in Iraq and
Afghanistan and for publishing leaked diplomatic
cables that pulled the mask off Washington’s ugly
foreign policy.
Murray’s jailing has nothing to do with the fact
that the contempt proceedings against him allowed
the Scottish court to deprive him of his passport so
that he could not travel to Spain and testify in a
related Assange case that is severely embarrassing
Britain and the US. The Spanish hearing has been
presented with reams of evidence that the US
illegally spied on Assange inside the Ecuadorean
embassy in London, where he sought political asylum
to avoid extradition. Murray was due to testify that
his own confidential conversations with Assange were
filmed, as were Assange’s privileged meetings with
his own lawyers. Such spying should have seen the
case against Assange thrown out, had the judge in
London actually been applying the law.
Actually what I found most shocking about that was the peculiar determination of the judges to make sure that, during the three weeks we have to lodge the appeal, I am not allowed to go to Spain to testify in the criminal prosecution for the CIA spying on Assange's legal team.
— Craig Murray - 1st day in prison (@CraigMurrayOrg) May 11, 2021
Similarly, Murray’s jailing has nothing to do
with his embarrassing the Scottish political and
legal establishments by reporting, almost
single-handedly, the defence case in the trial of
Scotland’s former First Minister, Alex Salmond.
Unreported by the corporate media, the evidence
submitted by Salmond’s lawyers led a jury dominated
by women to acquit him of a raft of sexual assault
charges. It is Murray’s reporting of Salmond’s
defence that has been the source of his current
troubles.
And most assuredly, Murray’s jailing has
precisely nothing to do with his argument – one that
might explain why the jury was so unconvinced by the
prosecution case – that Salmond was actually the
victim of a high-level plot by senior politicians at
Holyrood to discredit him and prevent his return to
the forefront of Scottish politics. The intention,
says Murray, was to deny Salmond the chance to take
on London and make a serious case for independence,
and thereby expose the SNP’s increasing lip service
to that cause.
Relentless attack
Murray has been a thorn in the side of the
British establishment for nearly two decades. Now
they have found a way to lock him up just as they
have Assange, as well as tie Murray up potentially
for years in legal battles that risk bankrupting him
as he seeks to clear his name.
And given his extremely precarious health –
documented in detail to the court – his imprisonment
further risks turning eight months into a life
sentence. Murray nearly died from a pulmonary
embolism 17 years ago when he was last under such
relentless attack from the British establishment.
His health has not improved since.
At that time, in the early 2000s, in the run-up
to and early stages of the invasion of Iraq, Murray
effectively exposed the complicity of fellow British
diplomats – their preference to turn a blind eye to
the abuses sanctioned by their own government and
its corrupt and corrupting alliance with the US.
Later, when Washington’s “extraordinary
rendition” – state-sponsored kidnapping – programme
came to light, as well as its torture regime at
places like Abu Ghraib, the spotlight should have
turned to the failure of diplomats to speak out.
Unlike Murray, they refused to turn whistleblower.
They provided cover to the illegality and barbarism.
For his pains, Murray was smeared by Tony Blair’s
government as, among other things, a sexual predator
– charges a Foreign Office investigation eventually
cleared him of. But the damage was done, with Murray
forced out. A commitment to moral and legal probity
was clearly incompatible with British foreign policy
objectives.
Murray had to reinvent his career, and he did so
through a
popular blog. He has applied the same dedication
to truth-telling and commitment to the protection of
human rights in his journalism – and has again run
up against equally fierce opposition from the
British establishment.
Two-tier journalism
The most glaring, and disturbing, legal
innovation in Lady Dorrian’s ruling against Murray –
and the main reason he is heading to prison – is her
decision to divide journalists into two classes:
those who work for approved corporate media outlets,
and those like Murray who are independent, often
funded by readers rather than paid big salaries by
billionaires or the state.
According to Lady Dorrian, licensed, corporate
journalists are entitled to legal protections she
denied to unofficial and independent journalists
like Murray – the very journalists who are most
likely to take on governments, criticise the legal
system, and expose the hypocrisy and lies of the
corporate media.
In finding Murray guilty of so-called “jigsaw
identification”, Lady Dorrian did not make a
distinction between what Murray wrote about the
Salmond case and what approved, corporate
journalists wrote.
That is for good reason. Two surveys have shown
that most of those following the Salmond trial who
believe they identified one or more of his accusers
did so from the coverage of the corporate media,
especially the BBC. Murray’s writings appear to have
had very little impact on the identification of any
of the accusers. Among named individual journalists,
Dani Garavelli, who wrote about the trial for
Scotland on Sunday and the London Review of Books,
was cited 15 times more often by respondents than
Murray as helping them to identify Salmond’s
accusers.
The polling was conducted by Panelbase as an extra question in one of their standard Scottish opinion polls. I paid for the question but there was no mechanism by which I could affect the results. Is showed Dani Garavelli as by far the biggest source of identification. https://t.co/sAqY9tbJw0pic.twitter.com/D1D6o9A7i7
— Craig Murray - 1st day in prison (@CraigMurrayOrg) February 3, 2021
Rather, Lady Dorrian’s distinction was about who
is awarded protection when identification occurs.
Write for the Times or the Guardian, or broadcast on
the BBC, where the audience reach is enormous, and
the courts will protect you from prosecution. Write
about the same issues for a blog, and you risk being
hounded into prison.
In fact, the legal basis of “jigsaw
identification” – one could argue the whole point of
it – is that it accrues dangerous powers to the
state. It gives permission for the legal
establishment to arbitrarily decide which piece of
the supposed jigsaw is to be counted as
identification. If the BBC’s Kirsty Wark includes a
piece of the jigsaw, it does not count as
identification in the eyes of the court. If Murray
or another independent journalist offers a different
piece of the jigsaw, it does count. The obvious ease
with which this principle can be abused by the
establishment to oppress and silence dissident
journalists should not need underscoring.
And yet this is no longer Lady Dorrian’s ruling
alone. In refusing to hear Murray’s appeal, the UK
supreme court has offered its blessing to this same
dangerous, two-tiered classification.
Credentialed by the state
What Lady Dorrian has done is to overturn
traditional views of what constitutes journalism:
that it is a practice that at its very best is
designed to hold the powerful to account, and that
anyone who engages in such work is doing journalism,
whether or not they are typically thought of as a
journalist.
That idea was obvious until quite recently. When
social media took off, one of the gains trumpeted
even by the corporate media was the emergence of a
new kind of “citizen journalist”. At that stage,
corporate media believed that these citizen
journalists would become cheap fodder, providing
on-the-ground, local stories they alone would have
access to and that only the establishment media
would be in a position to monetise. This was
precisely the impetus for the Guardian’s Comment is
Free section, which in its early incarnation allowed
a varied selection of people with specialist
knowledge or information to provide the paper with
articles for free to increase the paper’s sales and
advertising rates.
The establishment’s attitude to citizen
journalists, and the Guardian’s to the Comment is
Free model, only changed when these new journalists
started to prove hard to control, and their work
often highlighted inadvertently or otherwise the
inadequacies, deceptions and double standards of the
corporate media.
Now, Lady Dorrian has put the final nail in the
coffin of citizen journalism. She has declared
through her ruling that she and other judges will be
the ones to decide who is considered a journalist
and thereby who receives legal protections for their
work. This is a barely concealed way for the state
to license or “credentialise” journalists. It turns
journalism into a professional guild with only
official, corporate journalists safe from legal
retribution by the state.
If you are an unapproved, uncredentialed
journalist, you can be jailed, as Murray is being,
on a similar legal basis to the imprisonment of
someone who carries out a surgical operation without
the necessary qualifications. But whereas the law
against charlatan surgeons is there to protect the
public, to stop unnecessary harm being inflicted on
the sick, Lady Dorrian’s ruling will serve a very
different purpose: to protect the state from the
harm caused by the exposure of its secret or most
malign practices by trouble-making, sceptical – and
now largely independent – journalists.
Journalism is being corralled back into the
exclusive control of the state and billionaire-owned
corporations. It may not be surprising that
corporate journalists, keen to hold on to their
jobs, are consenting through their silence to this
all-out assault on journalism and free speech. After
all, this is a kind of protectionism – additional
job security – for journalists employed by a
corporate media that has no real intention to
challenge the powerful.
But what is genuinely shocking is that this
dangerous accretion of further power to the state
and its allied corporate class is being backed
implicitly by the British journalists’ union, the
NUJ. It has kept quiet over the many months of
attacks on Murray and the widespread efforts to
discredit him for his reporting. The NUJ has made no
significant noise about Lady Dorrian’s creation of
two classes of journalists – state-approved and
unapproved – or about her jailing of Murray on these
grounds.
But the NUJ has gone further. Its leaders have
publicly washed their hands of Murray by excluding
him from membership of the union, even while its
officials have conceded that he should qualify. The
NUJ has become as complicit in the hounding of a
journalist as Murray’s fellow diplomats once were
for his hounding as an ambassador. This is a truly
shameful episode in the NUJ’s history.
Calling all NUJ Members - When a country's main union for journalists polices the Overton window, you are in a society well on the way to authoritarianism. For four months I have been excluded from the National Union of Journalists and, despite repeated https://t.co/RrdjiXUmmo
— Craig Murray - 1st day in prison (@CraigMurrayOrg) July 16, 2020
Free speech criminalised
But more dangerous still, Lady Dorrian’s ruling
is part of a pattern in which the political,
judicial and media establishments have colluded to
narrow the definition of what counts as journalism,
to exclude anything beyond the pap that usually
passes for journalism in the corporate media.
Murray has been one of the few journalists to
report in detail the arguments made by Assange’s
legal team in his extradition hearings. Noticeably
in both the Assange and Murray cases, the presiding
judge has limited the free speech protections
traditionally afforded to journalism and has done so
by restricting who qualifies as a journalist. Both
cases have been frontal assaults on the ability of
certain kinds of journalists – those who are free
from corporate or state pressure – to cover
important political stories, effectively
criminalising independent journalism. And all this
has been achieved by sleight of hand.
In Assange’s case, Judge Vanessa Baraitser
largely assented to US claims that what the
Wikileaks founder had done was espionage rather than
journalism. The Obama administration had held off
prosecuting Assange because it could not find a
distinction in law between his legal right to
publish evidence of US war crimes and the New York
Times and the Guardian’s right to publish the same
evidence, provided to them by Wikileaks. If the US
administration prosecuted Assange, it would also
need to prosecute the editors of those papers.
Donald Trump’s officials bypassed that problem by
creating a distinction between “proper” journalists,
employed by corporate outlets that oversee and
control what is published, and “bogus” journalists,
those independents not subject to such oversight and
pressures.
Trump’s officials denied Assange the status of
journalist and publisher and instead treated him as
a spy who colluded with and assisted whistleblowers.
That supposedly voided the free speech protections
he constitutionally enjoyed. But, of course, the US
case against Assange was patent nonsense. It is
central to the work of investigative journalists to
“collude” with and assist whistleblowers. And spies
squirrel away the information provided to them by
such whistleblowers, they do not publicise it to the
world, as Assange did.
Notice the parallels with Murray’s case.
Judge Baraitser’s approach to Assange echoed the
US one: that only approved, credentialed journalists
enjoy the protection of the law from prosecution;
only approved, credentialed journalists have the
right to free speech (should they choose to exercise
it in newsrooms beholden to state or corporate
interests). Free speech and the protection of the
law, Baraitser implied, no longer chiefly relate to
the legality of what is said, but to the
legal status of who says it.
A similar methodology has been adopted by Lady
Dorrian in Murray’s case. She has denied him the
status of a journalist, and instead classified him
as some kind of “improper” journalist, or blogger.
As with Assange, there is an implication that
“improper” or “bogus” journalists are such an
exceptional threat to society that they must be
stripped of the normal legal protections of free
speech.
“Jigsaw identification” – especially when allied
to sexual assault allegations, involving women’s
rights and playing into the wider, current obsession
with identity politics – is the perfect vehicle for
winning widespread consent for the criminalisation
of the free speech of critical journalists.
Corporate media shackles
There is an even bigger picture that should be
hard to miss for any honest journalist, corporate or
otherwise. What Lady Dorrian and Judge Baraitser –
and the establishment behind them – are trying to do
is put the genie back in the bottle. They are trying
to reverse a trend that over more than a decade has
seen a small but growing number of journalists use
new technology and social media to liberate
themselves from the shackles of the corporate media
and tell truths audiences were never supposed to
hear.
Don’t believe me? Consider the case of Guardian
and Observer journalist Ed Vulliamy. In his book
Flat Earth News, Vulliamy’s colleague at the
Guardian Nick Davies tells the story of how Roger
Alton, editor of the Observer at the time of the
Iraq war, and a credentialed, licensed journalist if
ever there was one, sat on one of the biggest
stories in the paper’s history for months on end.
In late 2002, Vulliamy, a veteran and much
trusted reporter, persuaded Mel Goodman, a former
senior CIA official who still had security clearance
at the agency, to go on record that the CIA knew
there were no WMD in Iraq – the pretext for an
imminent and illegal invasion of that country. As
many suspected, the US and British governments had
been telling lies to justify a coming war of
aggression against Iraq, and Vulliamy had a key
source to prove it.
But Alton spiked this earth-shattering story and
then refused to publish another six versions written
by an increasingly exasperated Vulliamy over the
next few months, as war loomed. Alton was determined
to keep the story out of the news. Back in 2002 it
only took a handful of editors – all of whom had
risen through the ranks for their discretion, nuance
and careful “judgment” – to make sure some kinds of
news never reached their readers.
Social media has changed such calculations.
Vulliamy’s story could not be quashed so easily
today. It would leak out, precisely through a
high-profile independent journalist like Assange or
Murray. Which is why such figures are so critically
important to a healthy and informed society – and
why they, and a few others like them, are gradually
being disappeared. The cost of allowing independent
journalists to operate freely, the establishment has
understood, is far too high.
First, all independent, unlicensed journalism was
lumped in as “fake news”. With that as the
background, social media corporations were able to
collude with so-called legacy media corporations to
algorithm independent journalists into oblivion. And
now independent journalists are being educated about
what fate is likely to befall them should they try
to emulate Assange or Murray.
Asleep at the wheel
In fact, while corporate journalists have been
asleep at the wheel, the British establishment has
been preparing to widen the net to criminalise all
journalism that seeks to seriously hold power to
account. A recent government
consultation document calling for a more
draconian crackdown on what is being deceptively
termed “onward disclosure” – code for journalism –
has won the backing of Home Secretary Priti Patel.
The document implicitly categorises journalism as
little different from espionage and whistleblowing.
In the wake of the consultation paper, the Home
Office has called on parliament to consider
“increased maximum sentences” for offenders – that
is, journalists – and ending the distinction
“between espionage and the most serious unauthorised
disclosures”. The government’s argument is that
“onward disclosures” can create “far more serious
damage” than espionage and so should be treated
similarly. If accepted, any public interest defence
– the traditional safeguard for journalists – will
be muted.
Anyone who followed the Assange hearings last
summer – which excludes most journalists in the
corporate media – will notice strong echoes of the
arguments made by the US for extraditing Assange,
arguments conflating journalism with espionage that
were largely accepted by Judge Baraitser.
None of this has come out of the blue. As the
online technology publication The Register
noted back in 2017, the Law Commission was at
the time considering “proposals in the UK for a
swingeing new Espionage Act that could jail
journalists as spies”. It said such an act was being
“developed in haste by legal advisers”.
It is quite extraordinary that two investigative
journalists – one a long-term, former member of
staff at the Guardian – managed to write an entire
article in that paper this month on the
government consultation paper and not mention
Assange once. The warning signs have been there for
the best part of a decade but corporate journalists
have refused to notice them. Similarly, it is no
coincidence that Murray’s plight has also not
registered on the corporate media’s radar.
Assange and Murray are the canaries in the coal
mine for the growing crackdown on investigative
journalism and on efforts to hold executive power to
account. There is, of course, ever less of that
being done by the corporate media, which may explain
why corporate outlets appear not only relaxed about
the mounting political and legal climate against
free speech and transparency but have been all but
cheering it on.
In the Assange and Murray cases, the British
state is carving out for itself a space to define
what counts as legitimate, authorised journalism –
and journalists are colluding in this dangerous
development, if only through their silence. That
collusion tells us a great deal about the mutual
interests of the corporate political and legal
establishments, on the one hand, and the corporate
media establishment on the other.
Assange and Murray are not only telling us
troubling truths we are not supposed to hear. The
fact that they are being denied solidarity by those
who are their colleagues, those who may be next in
the firing line, tells us everything we need to know
about the so-called mainstream media: that the role
of corporate journalists is to serve establishment
interests, not challenge them.
Jonathan Cook is an award-winning British
journalist based in Nazareth, Israel, since 2001.
He is the author of three books on the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict:
Blood and Religion: The Unmasking of
the Jewish State (2006)
Israel and the Clash of Civilisations:
Iraq, Iran and the Plan to Remake the Middle
East (2008)
Disappearing Palestine: Israel’s
Experiments in Human Despair (2008)
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