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Radio  |  Special report: Iraq - the media war  |  Special report: the BBC  |  Television

Gilligan will be 'worried and sickened' says Liddle

Jason Deans
Friday July 18, 2003


Andrew Gilligan, the BBC journalist at the heart of the Iraq dossier affair, will be feeling "worried, frightened and pretty sickened" by the news that his alleged source, David Kelly, may have taken his own life, according to his former boss at the Today programme.

Former Today editor Rod Liddle, who hired Gilligan from the Sunday Telegraph three years ago, told Sky News that if Dr Kelly was dead, serious questions would need to be asked about the involvement of No 10 and the prime minister's communications director, Alastair Campbell, in the hunt for Gilligan's source.

"I would've thought Andrew was worried, frightened and pretty sickened by what's happened. These are fairly terrifying developments. We want to know what sort of pressure Dr Kelly has been put under by the government, or by anybody else - but particularly by the government," Liddle said.

"We need to find out what No 10 and Alastair Campbell's involvement was in attempts to track down Mr Gilligan's source," he added.

"Quite clearly there was a concerted effort to root out whoever had the temerity to speak to a journalist, supposedly out of turn. I'd also be interested to find out who decided in the end, or what pressure was put on the [foreign affairs] select committee, to call back both Andrew Gilligan and Dr Kelly for another cross examination."

Liddle said he "didn't see how" Dr Kelly's disappearance could be blamed on journalism, as the Ministry of Defence scientist's close friend, veteran TV reporter Tom Mangold, has claimed.

"I don't see what Gilligan or the BBC could've done that was different. Here was a senior member of the security services who told Andrew Gilligan, on a matter of the most extraordinary public interest, that the government had sexed up the dossier on Iraq. That was absolutely right to report," he added.

· To contact the MediaGuardian newsdesk email editor@mediaguardian.co.uk or phone 020 7239 9857

 Timelines
18.07.2003: Dr David Kelly
18.07.2003: The Gilligan affair

 Related articles
18.07.2003: Blair promises public inquiry
18.07.2003: Mystery over naming of MoD 'mole'
18.07.2003: Body matches Kelly's description
18.07.2003: Kelly's treatment was 'inexcusable', say friends
18.07.2003: Body found in search for MoD 'mole'
18.07.2003: 'BBC mole' reported missing
18.07.2003: Profile: Dr David Kelly
18.07.2003: MPs accuse Gilligan of changing story
17.07.2003: BBC row with government deepens
16.07.2003: Tory leader attacks government 'deceit'
15.07.2003: Mole casts doubt on MoD claims
15.07.2003: Kaufman calls for BBC press ban
16.07.2003: MPs say scientist not BBC source
14.07.2003: Is Phil Bassett the new Alastair Campbell?
12.07.2003: Speculation grows over Campbell
10.07.2003: MPs will question MoD arms consultant
10.07.2003: Scientist named as BBC contact
09.07.2003: Short attacks 'bully' Campbell
09.07.2003: Hoon names MoD 'mole' in move BBC brands a farce
09.07.2003: BBC rejects deal on naming dossier source
09.07.2003: BBC chairman's letter to Geoff Hoon
08.07.2003: MoD man admits he met Gilligan
08.07.2003: Dyke urges Campbell to bury hatchet
08.07.2003: Ex-Campbell aide blasts 'salacious' BBC
08.07.2003: Not guilty verdict may not prevent an eventual exit
07.07.2003: BBC hits back over Straw demand for apology
07.07.2003: Humphrys: we were right
07.07.2003: Bury the hatchet, say PR chiefs
07.07.2003: MPs demand investigation of Gilligan contacts
07.07.2003: Report justifies BBC, says corporation
07.07.2003: Campbell cleared of doctoring Iraq dossier
07.07.2003: BBC and government in stalemate
07.07.2003: Governors back BBC in row over Iraq dossier
07.07.2003: Robin Cook: Blair was wrong
07.07.2003: Experts sceptical about pre-war Saddam threat
06.07.2003: Blair stakes reputation in battle with BBC
06.07.2003: MI6 chief briefed BBC over Iraq arms fears
05.07.2003: Dyke summoned to BBC crisis meeting
04.07.2003: No 10 challenges BBC over Hoon interview
04.07.2003: Study deals a blow to claims of BBC anti-war bias
04.07.2003: Dossier not 'sexed up' say MPs
03.07.2003: Top BBC journalists lash out at Sun
03.07.2003: Letter reveals Campbell's role in intelligence dossier
01.07.2003: BBC offers olive branch to No 10
30.06.2003: Minister unrepentant in Gilligan row
30.06.2003: Dossier debacle: the questions left unanswered
29.06.2003: BBC set to sue minister over Iraq 'lies' claim
28.06.2003: BBC takes dossier fight to Campbell
28.06.2003: Master of spin storms studio to become the story
27.06.2003: BBC defiant over Campbell attack
27.06.2003: BBC stands firm in Iraq row
27.06.2003: Straw promises 'decisive evidence' in Iraq row
27.06.2003: BBC scorns Campbell deadline for apology
26.06.2003: No 10 steps up row with BBC
26.06.2003: BBC hits back in Iraq row
26.06.2003: Campbell claims BBC lied
25.06.2003: BBC stands by Gilligan over Campbell claims
25.06.2003: Campbell lambasts BBC over Iraq 'lies'

 Reports, statements and letters
07.07.2003: Report on Gilligan and Campbell
Full text of report
07.07.2003: Report at a glance
07.07.2003: Full text of BBC governors' statement
27.06.2003: Sambrook's letter to Campbell: full text

 Andrew Gilligan's 'sexed up' dossier broadcast
27.06.2003: Extracts from his report on BBC Radio 4's Today

 Comment and analysis
16.07.2003: Simon Hoggart: Whisper of confusion tells its own story
09.07.2003: Patrick Wintour: BBC plays cards close to its chest
09.07.2003: Matt Wells: How BBC saw trickery in Hoon deal
08.07.2003: Matt Wells: BBC back to business in bullish mood
08.07.2003: Lance Price: 'Alastair did not lie'
08.07.2003: Leader: Ministerial sauce
07.07.2003: Rod Liddle: Why the BBC was right
07.07.2003: Tom Happold: Judgment day
07.07.2003: Peter Preston: It's a charade and we all know it
04.07.2003: Matt Wells: Trading blows over the culture of cynicism
04.07.2003: Letters: Single source of BBC discontent
04.07.2003: Justin Lewis: Biased broadcasting corporation
30.06.2003: Peter Preston: Why don't they look for the mole?
27.06.2003: BBC v Downing Street: what the papers said
30.06.2003: Nicholas Jones: Campbell exposed
29.06.2003: Kamal Ahmed: War of the words
28.06.2003: Richard Norton-Taylor: BBC row obscures ugly truth
29.06.2003: Peter Beaumont: The BBC reported what we were all told
30.06.2003: Roy Hattersley: The voters do not like bullies
28.06.2003: Leader: Labour's phoney war

 Andrew Gilligan
27.06.2003: Tough reporter who has riled No 10
05.06.2003: Thorn in flesh of Downing Street
05.06.2003: Gilligan defends Iraq report

 Press review
07.07.2003: July 7: what the papers said
30.06.2003: June 30: what the papers said

 MediaGuardian.co.uk special reports
The BBC
Iraq: the media war






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