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The Bristolian shortlisted for Paul Foot award

belboid said:
I guess it will be from Nick Owens, Heather Brooke, or Wilf Mbanga.

http://www.private-eye.co.uk/content/showitem.cfm/issue.1142/section.pfaward

'Fraid not.

Here's the shortlist:

CITATIONS ON BEHALF OF THE JUDGES – by Richard Stott

Felicity Lawrence - The Guardian
One of the many aspects of Paul’s journalism was his determination to shed light in dark corners others would not visit, particularly among oppressed and marginalised minorities who had no voice until Foot spoke for them.
Felicity Lawrence’s painstaking and difficult year-long investigation exposed the exploitation of migrant workers by unscrupulous gang-masters. She revealed widespread practices of cheap and illegal labour often housed in terrible conditions, the unacknowledged price we pay for massive supermarket profits. It is a world of Dickensian squalor, vicious exploitation, greed and government ignorance, exposed fearlessly by a brave reporter.

The Bristolian
Spikey, angry, iconoclastic, rude, abrasive. The “smiter of the high and mighty” says The Bristolian on its masthead, evoking irresistible memories of early Private Eye. Run on its wits, talent and a shoestring, The Bristolian is the authentic voice of the streets. Foot would have loved and admired its two- fingered approach.

John Sweeney - The Daily Mail
John Sweeney’s four-year investigation into the terrible injustices suffered by Sally Clark, Angela Cannings and Donna Anthony, wrongly imprisoned for killing their children, led to the exposure of the prosecution’s chief witness, the eminent paediatrician Sir Roy Meadow. A campaign that culminated in him being stuck off by the General Medical Council.
Sweeney’s relentless pursuit of justice was in the highest tradition of Paul Foot journalism. Initially an unpopular and largely forgotten cause, a battle against apparently insuperable odds and finally the exposure of shocking incompetence and shortcomings in three Establishment professions – police, medicine and the law – that sentenced women to prison for crimes they did not commit. Sweeney’s dogged highlighting of these injustices kept the flame of hope alight when it appeared extinguished for ever. As a result many cases have been referred to the Court of Appeal and the guidelines on expert witnesses in child abuse cases have been changed.

Daniel Foggo and Charlotte Edwardes, The Sunday Telegraph
The exposure of the extraordinary fact that the British Pregnancy Advisory Service – an NHS funded charity and Britain’s largest abortion provider – was facilitating illegal late abortions, was a show-stopper in true Foot tradition. Meticulously researched and well written, the report led inevitably to a Department of Health inquiry into the BPAS and a report critical of the agency by the chief medical officer.

Eamonn O’Neill – The Herald (Glasgow)

Foot relished nothing better than the pursuit of a bent copper. Eamonn O’Neill’s tenacious and lengthy quest for justice in the case of Robert Brown, who spent 25 years in jail – put there by a detective later convicted for corruption – before being cleared of murder, echoes some of Paul’s most famous campaigns. This was raw, cutting-edge journalism at its best.

Heather Brooke - The Daily Telegraph, Sunday Times, New Statesman, The Indpendent, The Guardian and The Times
The cornerstone of Paul’s journalism was the public’s right to know what their leaders were doing in their name. He took the view we probably wouldn’t like it if we knew and that is why they lied and covered-up when they could. In a raft of investigations, Heather Brooke has campaigned tirelessly to strip away the secrecy our rulers would impose if we let them. But for the tenacity and breadth of knowledge of such journalists as Heather, they would probably succeed.
 
butchersapron said:
No, that's a prick called Tony Gosling.
In that case could someone direct me to Bristolian we're talking about here.

I tried clicking on the web address given by the poster called Bristolian, but it said file not found.
 
rednblack said:
what has notes from the borderland got to do with CW? :confused:

We sell it, and I write for it, but that's about it. I think rebel has got confused.

In the current issue the Paul Foot article takes up just 12 pages out of 68. Whereas Rebel might actually learn something about the nail bombings, David Shayler, gangland Manchester or the relationship between the media and police/security services, if he read the other 52 pages.

One of the problems with Trots (and particularly how the SWP manages to create such intellectually rigid members) is that they are really, really poor when it comes to reading reading anything serious from non-Trot sources.

Something like Notes from the Borderland seems to scare them.
 
belboid said:
thank the lord i gave up being a sub-editor then eh!

ah: the fact you were fully explains your inability to separate the wood from the trees, & the fact you'll have (at best: I doubt it) skim read the Foot article. Go back to orgasming reading the Guardian why don't you?

BTW, the Bristolian is an excellent publication, and it would be good to see them get some cash. Though equally a pity that it might have the Right Honourable's name attached to it.

Also, re the list, however dodgy his work on Iraq, say, John Sweeney's work on injustices re Angela Cannings & the travesty that is the Family Courts system really is superb.
 
Kenny Vermouth said:
In that case could someone direct me to Bristolian we're talking about here.

I tried clicking on the web address given by the poster called Bristolian, but it said file not found.

We're print only I'm afraid, partly due to technical incompetence and partly as a homage to our illustrious 19th Century forebear.
There are some back issues 2001 - 2003 at www.bristolian.org.
The more recent copies have to be purchased on Corn Street, Bristol at the weekly Farmers Market on a Wednesday.
It has been said that this is an erratic distribution policy...
 
Paul Marsh said:
In the current issue the Paul Foot article takes up just 12 pages out of 68.
just? what a waste of 11 pages.

NftB is overwhelmingly a magazine well worth reading, a shame they bothered wasting so much space on such a complete non-story.
 
bristol_citizen said:
We're print only I'm afraid, partly due to technical incompetence and partly as a homage to our illustrious 19th Century forebear.
There are some back issues 2001 - 2003 at www.bristolian.org.
The more recent copies have to be purchased on Corn Street, Bristol at the weekly Farmers Market on a Wednesday.
It has been said that this is an erratic distribution policy...
I tried clicking on news and got nothing.
I tried clicking on issues and was invited to submit a comment.
Is there any way to read some of the news stories online? I don't care how old I just want a flavour.
 
There's this:

325103.jpg


and this

bristolian94front_page.jpg


and some links

http://brisbane.indymedia.org.au/front.php3?article_id=3430&group=webcast

http://www.ainfos.ca/05/jan/ainfos00222.html
 
Attica said:
My memorys telling me it was a journo named Delgardo who was camped outside a MA'M members flat in London, 2001...

yeah but your memory is probably about as sane as the rest of you :p
 
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