Parisian suit -- not the fashion sort
Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo told CNN Tuesday that she may sue Fox News
because the network "insulted" the city with its coverage of "no-go
zones" that are supposedly only for Muslim residents.
Such zones don't exist and Fox News has repeatedly apologized for the errors.
"When
we're insulted, and when we've had an image, then I think we'll have to
sue, I think we'll have to go to court, in order to have these words
removed," CNN quoted Hidalgo as saying to the network's Christiane
Amanpour. "The image of Paris has been prejudiced, and the honor of
Paris has been prejudiced."
Michael
Clemente, executive vice president for news at Fox News said in a
statement: "We empathize with the citizens of France as they go through a
healing process and return to everyday life. However, we find the
Mayor's comments regarding a lawsuit misplaced."
"We have made
some regrettable errors regarding the Muslim population in Europe,
particularly in regard to England and France," a Fox News anchor said
Monday on air. "We deeply regret the errors and apologize to any and all
who may have taken offense, including the people of France."
In a
series of reports that have been widely criticized and mocked, Fox News
reported that some neighborhoods in Paris are so heavily Muslim that
some young men openly wore Osama bin Laden T-shirts. Displaying a map
that supposedly outlines these "no-go zones," Fox News also reported
that terrorists groups recruit members in the areas.
A French TV
show later explained that the map actually shows the zones in the city
that are targeted for development based on residents' income levels and
employment rates.
Another Fox segment, with host Jeanine Pirro
interviewing guest Steven Emerson, reported that Birmingham, England, is
totally Muslim and other cities in Europe have zones that are dominated
by Muslims, operate Sharia courts and police fear to enter.
"When
I heard this, frankly, I choked on my porridge and I thought it must be
April Fool's Day," British Prime Minister David Cameron told ITV News. "This guy is clearly a complete idiot."
Still,
Paris would have a "difficult" case against Fox News in the U.S. since
the city would be treated as a public figure, says Karl Kronenberger,
partner attorney at Kronenberger Rosenfeld LLP. Paris "would need
to prove that the information published by Fox News was false and that
the information was published with actual malice," he said.
Speaking as a lawyer, I must say that such a case would probably never come to judgment. But what a hoot if Faux News were to be proved to be a publisher of malicious lies. Proved in the legal sense, that is, since the most casual observer realizes that such is their stock-in-trade.
Fox News is inaccurate? Say it ain't so!
ReplyDeleteEven a broken clock is right twice a day ... so let's grant two accuracies a day to Fox, too.
ReplyDelete