Australian media to face court over coverage of cardinal George Pell's trial for child sex abuse
- Type of protection : Granting release
- Details
- Category: Paedophile Pell
- Created: Tuesday, 16 April 2019 11:53
- Written by Straits Times
Macquarie Media did not respond to a request for comment but it has previously declined to comment, as the accusations are subject to legal proceedings.
Nine, which owns the Age and the Australian Financial Review, has denied the accusations and said it was surprised by the charges.
News Corp has said it will defend itself vigorously.
Pell, who became the most senior Catholic cleric worldwide to be convicted of child sex abuse, was jailed for six years in February.
The county court of Victoria put a suppression order on reporting of Pell's trial last year to prevent jury prejudice in that case, as well as on a second trial on other charges set for last month.
In December, the jury in the first trial found Pell guilty of abusing two choir boys.
After the verdict, some Australian media said an unnamed high-profile person had been convicted of a serious crime that could not be reported.
No Australian media named Pell or the charges at the time, though some overseas media did.
Those who published online do not have offices or staff in Australia and were not charged for ignoring the suppression order, but have lobbied against it.
"Gag orders are futile in a case of global interest in the digital age," said Mr Steven Butler, an official of the Washington-based Committee to Protect Journalists.
"We urge Australian authorities to drop these proceedings and to re-examine the application of such suppression orders,"he added.
The gag order, which had applied across Australia "and on any website or other electronic or broadcast format accessible within Australia", was lifted on Feb 26 when the charges that would have figured in the second trial were dropped.
Source : https://www.straitstimes.com/asia/australianz/aust