Skip to content or view screen version

Tower Hamlets - could the BBC & Private Eye be leaving out 'UK National' angle?

InnercityWanderers | 16.04.2014 16:23 | Analysis | Policing | Social Struggles | London | World

The London Met Police is reported by Wednesday's Guardian (16 April 2014) web site and by the Evening Standard to have found 'no evidence' of criminality in Tower Hamlets Council.
There will therefore be no investigation by the Police into Tower Hamlets Council, say those reports.

The London Met Police is reported by Wednesday's Guardian (16 April 2014) web site and by the Evening Standard to have found 'no evidence' of criminality in Tower Hamlets Council.
There will therefore be no investigation by the Police into Tower Hamlets Council, say those reports.
The Police’s involvement is not anything the BBC’s Panorama (Monday 31 March 2014) had claimed top be linked with the programme’s investigation, says the BBC statement quoted in today’s Guardian item about the Police ‘clearing’ all doubts about Tower Hamlets Council.
The next issue of Private Eye, officially published on Friday, carried another entry about Tower Hamlets in the magazine’s Rotten Boroughs column.
The Private Eye entry too refers to the Panorama programme, more as a PR piece apologising in effect for the programme’s shortcomings.
A very different matter from an original addition to any investigation into Tower Hamlets Borough Council.
That shortcoming, as admitted in the Private Eye is further evidence of the weakness in the strategy they have been backing now for the past few years.
One of the Private Eye “sources” has been given extra space by the tight-spaced publication to no avail.
So how is it that despite the BBC and Private Eye, two of the more widely known ‘organs of the British Media’, have again failed to see any action or rather any results following their roles in giving considerable publicity to the claims as they retailed from sources who are quite easily identifiable locally in the East End?
Could it be that the BBC bought the line that the Council has published against the Panorama programme's s agenda as being motivated by racism and Islamophobia?
Could it also be that regardless of what the producers, editors and programme designers on Tower Hamlets may have said by way of rustication, that they have let the wrongdoers off because the programme lacked real link with the real people on the ground?
This is why the Private Eye pieces are now in danger of being treated as examples of humour in a most bizarre setting.
That the satire and the joke are on the BBC and on Private Eye.
This view is reinforced by the latest dedicated contributions by the original “inquisitor” Mr Andrew Gilligan.
His return as a Telegraph blogger has be4n marked by his vitriolic references to Tower Hamlets.
This ahs been followed by a piece or two in the ideologically aligned Spectator magazine too.
The line that they are stacking to is that the elected e3xscwykve mayor in Tower Hamlets ahs been too closely linked with and been supporting Islamic extremists.
But despite their earnest efforts, the Police aren’t taking any action.
This reluctance by the Police to take any criminal action against Tower Hamlets Council on published allegations may have something to do with the British ‘national interest’.
A factor that beater the BBC nor Private Eye nor the magazine’s ‘sources’ have recognised, even after apparently being “on the case” for over four years!
The dedication of Mr Gilligan dates back to 2010.
He and a few of his allies in the miniature Crusade have not been silent but they have not spoken once about the UK national interest
Could it be that Tower Hamlets Council might have been configured by the unseen strategists playing the power, to suit the dictates, the demands and the diplomatic affiliations of UK Foreign Policy?

InnercityWanderers

Comments

Hide the following 2 comments

The Met Police statement 16 April 2014 raises more Qs

16.04.2014 16:39

Here it is, the Met Police stateemnt:

Update following BBC Panorama on London Borough of Tower Hamlets


The material on this page is for media organisations only. Please do not publish links to this page.

This page was last updated on
16-Apr-2014 10:53

DMC Contacts


On Friday 4 April 2014 the Metropolitan Police Service received three files of material from the Department of Communities and Local Government (DCLG) relating to the London Borough of Tower Hamlets. These comprised of material referred to the DCLG by a member of the public and by the BBC Panorama programme.

The files have been reviewed by a team of officers over the past 6 days. In addition, officers have liaised with Pricewaterhouse Coopers LLP (PwC) who are conducting a full and wide-ranging audit of financial matters at the London Borough of Tower Hamlets.

There is no credible evidence of criminality within the files to provide reasonable grounds to suspect that fraud or any other offence has been committed at this stage. Therefore the MPS will not be investigating at this point in time and believe that it is appropriate for the material to be reviewed further by PwC and DCLG. We will continue to liaise with them should their audit uncover any evidence of criminality.



Onlooker


Two months on, a surprising vindication

13.06.2014 04:18

From April 2014 to 13 June 2014.
Two months and no fundamental changes in the arrangements!
Not so far.


The London Met Police is reported by Wednesday's Guardian (16 April 2014) web site and by the Evening Standard to have found 'no evidence' of criminality in Tower Hamlets Council.
There will therefore be no investigation by the Police into Tower Hamlets Council, say those reports.
The Police’s involvement is not anything the BBC’s Panorama (Monday 31 March 2014) had claimed top be linked with the programme’s investigation, says the BBC statement quoted in today’s Guardian item about the Police ‘clearing’ all doubts about Tower Hamlets Council.
The next issue of Private Eye, officially published on Friday, carried another entry about Tower Hamlets in the magazine’s Rotten Boroughs column.
The Private Eye entry too refers to the Panorama programme, more as a PR piece apologising in effect for the programme’s shortcomings.
A very different matter from an original addition to any investigation into Tower Hamlets Borough Council.
That shortcoming, as admitted in the Private Eye is further evidence of the weakness in the strategy they have been backing now for the past few years.
One of the Private Eye “sources” has been given extra space by the tight-spaced publication to no avail.
So how is it that despite the BBC and Private Eye, two of the more widely known ‘organs of the British Media’, have again failed to see any action or rather any results following their roles in giving considerable publicity to the claims as they retailed from sources who are quite easily identifiable locally in the East End?
Could it be that the BBC bought the line that the Council has published against the Panorama programme's s agenda as being motivated by racism and Islamophobia?
Could it also be that regardless of what the producers, editors and programme designers on Tower Hamlets may have said by way of rustication, that they have let the wrongdoers off because the programme lacked real link with the real people on the ground?
This is why the Private Eye pieces are now in danger of being treated as examples of humour in a most bizarre setting.
That the satire and the joke are on the BBC and on Private Eye.
This view is reinforced by the latest dedicated contributions by the original “inquisitor” Mr Andrew Gilligan.
His return as a Telegraph blogger has be4n marked by his vitriolic references to Tower Hamlets.
This has been followed by a piece or two in the ideologically aligned Spectator magazine too.
The line that they are stacking to is that the elected executive mayor in Tower Hamlets has been too closely linked with and been supporting Islamic extremists.
But despite their earnest efforts, the Police aren’t taking any action.
This reluctance by the Police to take any criminal action against Tower Hamlets Council on published allegations may have something to do with the British ‘national interest’.
A factor that beater the BBC nor Private Eye nor the magazine’s ‘sources’ have recognised, even after apparently being “on the case” for over four years!
The dedication of Mr Gilligan dates back to 2010.
He and a few of his allies in the miniature Crusade have not been silent but they have not spoken once about the UK national interest
Could it be that Tower Hamlets Council might have been configured by the unseen strategists playing the power, to suit the dictates, the demands and the diplomatic affiliations of UK Foreign Policy?

InnercityWanderers