The Sun UK publish Prince Harry's naked photos
UK
press was banned from publishing pictures of naked Prince Harry by the
royal family. The royal family lawyers threatened legal action and St James’s Palace warned that the pictures were a gross invasion of the young royal's privacy.
The
Sun is NOT making any moral judgement about Harry’s nude frolics with
girls in a Las Vegas hotel. Far from it. He often sails close to the
wind for a Royal — but he’s 27, single and a soldier. We like him.
We are publishing the photos because we think Sun readers have a right to see them.
The reasons for that go beyond this one story.
The
images were first published on the web three days ago. But the Palace’s
lawyers, via the Press Complaints Commission, warned the UK’s
newspapers against printing them, claiming they would breach Harry’s
privacy and the PCC Code.
Since
then the entire UK media — print, online and TV — has reported on them
and told readers and viewers how to find them on TMZ.com, the website
that first published them, and on countless other sites that followed
suit.
That coverage put those pictures a mouse-click away from anyone in the 77 per cent of British households with internet access.
Millions duly found them on sites from Canada to New Zealand. By
yesterday, the photographs were indisputably in the public domain
everywhere in the world.
That generated a legitimate public debate about the behaviour of the
man who is third in line to the throne and increasingly taking on
official duties, as he did most recently at the Olympics’ closing
ceremony.
Yet as that debate went on in homes, factories, offices and pubs, the
Press were still effectively banned from using the pictures.
The many millions of people who get their news in print, or have no web
access, could not take a full part in that national conversation
because they could not see the images.
The Royal Family’s lawyers claim there is no public interest in The Sun
running the photos. This is a favourite mantra of those who wish to
muzzle the world’s most vibrant newspapers, here in Britain — stuffily
declaring that a story has “no public interest”, as though it were an
unassailable fact.
But there is a clear public interest in publishing the Harry pictures,
in order for the debate around them to be fully informed. The photos
have potential implications for the Prince’s image representing Britain
around the world.
There are questions over his security during the Las Vegas holiday.
Questions as to whether his position in the Army might be affected.
Further, we believe Harry has compromised his own privacy.
These are not pictures of him and a girlfriend at Balmoral. The Prince
was in Vegas, the party capital of a country with strong
freedom-of-speech laws, frolicking in the pool before inviting
strangers to his hotel room for a game of strip billiards.
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