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News of the World hacking scandal moves to UK court

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CIOL Bureau
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Georgina Prodhan

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LONDON, UK: An attempt by Rupert Murdoch to draw a line under an escalating phone-hacking scandal looked set to fail on Friday with a host of lawyers going to court to join forces against his British newspaper publishing arm.

An investigation into newsgathering practices at the News of the World tabloid has so far touched public figures from actress Sienna Miller to British Prime Minister David Cameron.

It has also cast a shadow over a planned deal by parent company News Corp for a $14 billion buyout of British pay-TV group BSkyB, with critics saying the government should put it on hold until the hacking investigation is over.

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News International's News of the World tabloid sells almost 3 million copies every Sunday -- more than any of its rivals -- fuelled by front-page tales of celebrity scandal.

Also read: Hacking smartphones is easy

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But a week ago the company admitted that some of those stories may have come from hacking private phone messages and accepted liability for the first time. News International apologised to eight people including Miller and British politician Tessa Jowell who are suing the company and said it would establish a compensation scheme.

But on Friday lawyers launched a case-management conference to decide how best to manage the claims -- which may have affected thousands of people -- suggesting the scandal is unlikely to die down soon.

REPORTERS ARRESTED

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For years, News International had maintained that phone hacking at the tabloid was limited to a few rogue individuals.

Its royal editor and a private investigator were jailed in 2007 for hacking into voicemail messages of aides to Britain's royal family. Editor Andy Coulson resigned, saying he took ultimate responsibility but had not known about the practice.

Coulson later became the prime minister's spokesman, but resigned from that post as a new police investigation gathered steam.

Police reopened their investigation at the start of this year after a dogged campaign by left-wing newspaper The Guardian. Three other senior News of the World reporters have since been arrested, including one on Thursday.

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