Discover Yahoo! With Your Friends

Explore news, videos, and much more based on what your friends are reading and watching. Publish your own activity and retain full control.

To get started, first

YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    Sun Editor Defends Use Of Page Three Models

    The Sun's editor Dominic Mohan has defended his paper's use of 'page three' girls after being recalled to the Leveson Inquiry.

    He described them as "good role models" and "very healthy", saying the 42-year-old tradition had become a part of British society.

    Mr Mohan told Lord Justice Leveson the women were not just models, describing them as ambassadors for the paper. "Some of them have travelled to places like Afghanistan," he said.

    But he admitted one article suggesting that looking at the paper's page three models could make you brainier was "a cheeky interpretation of a scientific survey".

    Meanwhile, The Times' editor James Harding, who was also recalled, has apologised to the Leveson Inquiry for email hacking carried out by one of the paper's reporters.

    The editor was recalled to court after more details emerged on how the paper revealed the identity of "NightJack", a serving police officer who ran an anonymous blog.

    Mr Harding told Lord Justice Leveson: "I sorely regret the intrusion into Richard Horton's email account by a journalist in our newsroom. On behalf of the newspaper, I apologise."

    The editor said, if he had known what reporter Patrick Foster had been doing, he would have told him to abandon the story.

    Mr Harding insisted he still believed it had been in the public interest to reveal the identity of NightJack, whose blog had won the prestigious Orwell prize, but not to the extent that it justified using illicit means to do so.

    He continued: "If Mr Foster had come to me and said, 'I would like to seek unauthorised access of an anonymous police officer's emails,' I would have said, 'It's not in the public interest.' Clearly he did not come to me in advance."

    The editor said he was not even told the paper's lawyers were going to court in June 2009 to try to overturn an injunction taken out by Mr Horton's lawyers to protect his identity.

    Mr Harding told the inquiry he only became aware of the hearing when it was already under way.

    He said he was distracted by a Cabinet reshuffle and had not informed the court what he had learnt by then about Mr Foster hacking NightJack's account.

    When Peter Jay QC, the counsel for the inquiry, pointed out that there was a good chance that Mr Justice Eady might well not have lifted the injunction had he been aware of the hacking, Mr Harding said he had written to the judge to apologise.

    "I have to own up to my responsibility and my failure here. I can see now we paid insufficient attention to the matter," Mr Harding said.

    But he claimed that, having taken up the judge's time, the paper felt a responsibility to publish.

    "When you look back at all this it's terrible," Mr Harding went on. "I hope you appreciate I know this as clearly as you do."

    The Times editor said his paper took the inquiry "extremely seriously", saying "whenever we learn anything new we bring it to your attention".

    Paul Dacre, the editor-in-chief of the Mail group, has also been recalled. He is expected to be quizzed on Thursday about why he chose to accuse Hugh Grant of spreading "mendacious smears" about his papers.

     

    27 comments

    • A Yahoo! User  •  Reading, England  •  3 months ago
      I think there should be a page 7 with a good pair of testicles on display every day.
      • John 3 months ago
        Eh? Great idea - I'm up for it.
      • Howard W 3 months ago
        There used to be a page 7 fella in the sun years ago .
      • A Yahoo! User 3 months ago
        He wasn't showing his testicles. We need wall to wall testicles and women commenting on how good or big or small your trsticles are when you walk down the street and testicle models going out to Afghanistan.
    • yvonne  •  Cheltenham, England  •  3 months ago
      "He described them as "good role models" and "very healthy", saying the 42-year-old tradition had become a part of British society."

      LOL... sex sells newspapers Mr Editor... stop trying to rationalise it as something other than what it is. It's t**s out for the lads - nothing more, nothing less.

      Mind you, calling the Sun a NEWSpaper, is stretching things a bit - it's a comic.
    • V for Vendetta  •  London, England  •  3 months ago
      Well he has to use something to get the brain-deads and similar to buy the trash he edits and publishes. Perhaps if he and all the other editors were to publish the truth about British Society, Europe and indeed many other things we might buy the wretched waste of paper. Instead they go along with their owners tawdry political aims, the limits imposed by Britain's elite and ultimately do everything to dumb down and hide what the public really should be told.
      • yvonne 3 months ago
        V... far too profound for most of the Sun readers to comprehend.
    • TellyAddict  •  3 months ago
      It is embarrassing sitting in a train when some oik opposite is reading the Sun and some topless tart's picture is either being slavered over by him or facing other passengers.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Reading, England  •  3 months ago
      Pornography should be banned from all public places and work places, including the armed forces. There are female staff and soldiers in Afghanistan too and a visit from a stripper does nothing to enhance their professional environment. They'd have a case for a tribunal in fact.
    • Richard  •  Chesham, England  •  3 months ago
      If Mohan believes this, why does no overseas edition of the Sun have a Page 3 model? They just have regular news stories.
    • barry  •  3 months ago
      What part did the models play in hacking "celebrities" phones-or am I missing the point of the inquiry
      • A Yahoo! User 3 months ago
        Yes you are missing the point of the enquiry. It is into press standards.
      • barry 3 months ago
        yes it has been designated an inquiry into press standards; but is in effect a witch hunt against News International's methods of reporting exactly what the masses want to read.
    • Tommy  •  Manchester, England  •  3 months ago
      only good for wiping my big fat hairy ar@e on
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Reading, England  •  3 months ago
      So he would have allowed 'unauthorised entry' into somebody's email if he thought it was in the public interest?
    • claire  •  3 months ago
      Tits on page 3 - yawn! Old hat.
      Go online and see as many as you want.
      • A Yahoo! User 3 months ago
        Different problem.
      • John 3 months ago
        Page Three #$%$ Now!
      • Tommy 3 months ago
        claire,the green eyed monster,or in my case the one eyed monster
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Reading, England  •  3 months ago
      Why is page three in quotes, but girls isn't?
      • Richard 3 months ago
        "page three" is a working class adjective lol
    • franklyincensed  •  Reading, England  •  3 months ago
      It's pathetic really, but sex sells and let's face it, if they had to rely on interesting, well balanced journalism they would have gone bankrupt years ago. I just wish they would have the guts to stop trying to justify it and tell it like it really is. No one who really wants to read the news buys the Sun do they?
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Reading, England  •  3 months ago
      Good role models?? This is what he thinks girls should aspire to? I wonder how all the female soldiers in Afghanistan feel about them coming to visit. I'm sure it helps them to feel like serious, respected professionals. What a #$%$
    • ANTHONY  •  London, England  •  3 months ago
      We'd never have had Samantha Fox without Page 3.....happy days
    • David  •  Ross-on-Wye, England  •  3 months ago
      After his comments on the page three models, Dominic Mohan must be feeling a right tit.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Reading, England  •  3 months ago
      Would you want a woman you cared about to do it? If not, then you know what you really think of it.
    • paul  •  Maidenhead, England  •  3 months ago
      Boycott the Sun Newspaper.... Crminals need boycotting
    • william  •  Brighton, England  •  3 months ago
      while the powers at the top try and look like they aren't trying to control the press,i must admit,i cannot see where the sun gets off showing women exposing themselves,then have the cheek to call anyone who even looks at a woman sexually a pervert!if anyone has ever read the total #$%$ in the little box beside the girl,you will get what i mean!if i started a mag now and had any topless women in it for any reason other than medical,it would automatically go on the top shelf,the establishment always gets their way!what kind of rubbish is it anyway?...vote tory...look at those tits there!vote tory,look at those tits there,unions are bad...corrrr look at those tits eh?...complete #$%$!
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Reading, England  •  3 months ago
      Page 3 is a large part of the reason for casual sexual harassment and sexism in this country. It sets the tone.
    • King Chaz  •  Windsor, England  •  3 months ago
      I for one think it's disgusting,they're all women....?