Historic attitudes favouring globalisation are fundamentally changing....
| 1yr
| 1yr
Historic attitudes favouring globalisation are fundamentally changing....
In the latest instalment of the press ethics scandal in the UK, the head of the hacking inquiry went before the UK Parliament’s home office select committee last week to answer questions on the affair, the Telegraph reports.
Commander Neil Basu told the UK Members of Parliament that his team had identified people from a wide range of businesses from major law firms to insurance companies and other blue-chip companies who secured the illegal services.
If there was sufficient evidence, these offenders could be prosecuted, he said.
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