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Updated Sun, July 27, 2008.
251.www.ledger-enquirer.com43800
252.www.registerguard.com43000
253.www.uexpress.com42400
254.www.dailypioneer.com42300
255.www.shreveporttimes.com42300
256.www.decaturdaily.com42100
257.www.desmoinesregister.com41500
258.www.mailtribune.com41300
259.tampatrib.com40500
260.www.heraldsun.news.com.au40100
261.www.daynews.com.cn39700
262.www.thisisnottingham.co.uk39400
263.www.jp.dk38900
264.www.mid-day.com38800
265.www.macombdaily.com38500
266.www.izvestia.ru38500
267.www.nypress.com38200
268.www.gazette.com37800
269.www.thetowntalk.com37600
270.www.bakersfield.com37500
271.www.thestatesman.net37400
272.www.fortwayne.com37300
273.www.nashvillecitypaper.com37300
274.www.washingtoncitypaper.com36900
275.www.oblad.no36800
276.www.newseum.org36600
277.www.kommersant.ru36600
278.www.honoluluadvertiser.com36300
279.www.timesunion.com35600
280.www.heraldsun.com35500
281.www.theday.com35400
282.www.estripes.com35400
283.www.bnd.com35100
284.www.dailybreeze.com34600
285.www.theoaklandpress.com33400
286.www.canadafreepress.com33300
287.www.newvision.co.ug33300
288.www.inq7.net33100
289.www.djc.com32200
290.www.jconline.com32100
291.www.mk.ru32000
292.www.dailybulletin.com31900
293.www.jacksonsun.com31900
294.seattle.bizjournals.com31800
295.www.tribune.com31600
296.www.dvhn.nl31400
297.www.theeagle.com31200
298.www.rapidcityjournal.com31100
299.www.calgarysun.com30900
300.www.montrealmirror.com30700
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263. www.jp.dk

Rating: 38900 points*
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Take on the libel bullies | Alexei Sayle
Not everyone can be as lucky as I was – these laws are as outdated as the wigs and gownsThe envelope was a funny shape – you don't get an envelope that shape without it meaning something bad; I don't know if sulphurous smoke was actually curling from it but it might as well have been. I was being sued for libel and though after a lot of time and effort the case was dismissed, and I was awarded costs (which I never saw), it was a horrible experience. I always thought it would have been a lot cheaper and a lot less worry if I'd stabbed the bloke – the most I would have got was an asbo barring me from certain parts of Croydon. As it was, I risked losing absolutely everything – just for saying some words.At the launch of the Index on Censorship, English PEN and Sense About Science's libel reform petition this week, I heard other stories of people who'd been through the libel mill: the Sheffield Wednesday fans who got solicitors letters after criticising the club's board on a fan forum; the Danish newspaper sued for questioning Icelandic banking practices; the science writers who dared challenge the claims of alternative therapists; and, perhaps most clear cut, down the line, couldn't-be-any-more-wrong awful, the case of cardiologist Peter Wilmshurst, who could lose the roof over his head after expressing his medical view on the performance of a heart implant device. This isn't just me shouting my mouth off, we're talking about something really important here: heart surgery, life and death.But our libel courts don't seem to acknowledge this. They're as archaic as the wigs and gowns worn by the barristers who make good livings defending dodgy oligarchs, greedy multinationals and egomaniacal politicians from "slurs" on their "reputation". For example, Wilmshurst can be sued here for comments made in America to a Canadian website because the libel laws haven't caught up with the internet; the simple fact that something can be read in England means claimants can come from anywhere in the world and use London courts to defend a reputation they never had in the first place. London has become a place to come to get away with stuff you couldn't get away with anywhere else. To paraphrase Index on Censorship's John Kampfner, we are a sort of judicial Cayman Islands.While foreign claimants are a problem, it's not just because they can come here that they do: they come because the courts are loaded against the defendant. It's very rare for a person or organisation to defend a libel case successfully. I was one of the lucky ones.But even then, we're only talking about the cases that get to court. How many bloggers have taken down articles from the web after receiving a threatening letter? It's impossible to say. This is where people such as Justice Eady, the judge who seems to decide on most libel cases, has it so badly wrong. Problem, what problem? he asks, citing the fact that relatively few cases make it to full trial. That's just the point.People are either bullied into settling out of court, and admitting wrongdoing even when they're completely right, or they self-censor. How many people – editors, writers, scientists, football fans, bloggers – have a little Eady nagging away in a corner of their brain, constantly reminding them that there are certain subjects that are taboo, thanks to our archaic defamation laws?Things have to change, and, hopefully, they are changing. The new libel coalition is up and running. People can sign up on www.libelreform.org and use the petition to lobby their MPs. There are indications that the government's position may be shifting and that David Cameron might also be persuaded to act. They should, because the UK's libel law is a global embarrassment and an affront to our liberties. That's why I was happy to be one of the first people to sign the petition for libel reform. With an election coming, which party wants to style itself as an enemy of free expression by not joining me in supporting this campaign?LawFreedom of SpeechMedia lawAlexei Sayleguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
Social unrest 'rising in China'
Despite economic growth, social unrest and crime is on the rise in China, according to an analysis by a Chinese think-tank.
news.bbc.co.uk
Iraq hostages: Peter Moore's kidnapping 'masterminded by Iran'
Kidnapping of the computer expert and the four other British men reportedly masterminded by Iran's Revolutionary Guard.
telegraph.co.uk
Explosives alert closes US port
A major US port in North Carolina is closed after containers carrying explosive material are found to be punctured.
news.bbc.co.uk
Kashmir mobile phone ban lifted
India's government lifts a ban, imposed for security reasons, on the pre-paid mobile phone service in Jammu and Kashmir.
news.bbc.co.uk