Online Journalism News
British Photographic Council reacts to police pixellation report
The British Photographic Council (BPC) has reacted angrily to recent reports that press photographers had met informally with members of the Metropolitan Police to agree a pixellation policy. On August 21 Press Gazette reported that after a meeting with senior officers from CO19, the Metropolitan Police's Specialist Firearms Command, an agreement had been reached that London photographers would pixellate out the identities of firearms officers pre-publication.
Nigel Howard, a photographer for the Evening Standard, was reported as saying he was happy to obscure police officers’ faces. The Metropolitan Police, however, has now assured the BPC that no new policy is in place.
After the initial report the National Union of Journalists (NUJ) condemned the meeting and the BPC released a statement, saying they were 'disappointed that the results of an informal meeting between CO19 (Firearms) Officers and a very small number of independent photographers should result in what appears to be reported as an attempt to vary the Metropolitan Police and ACPO [Association of Chief Police Officer] Media Guidelines.'
"The guidelines for police clearly state: members of the media have a duty to take photographs and film incidents and we have no legal power or moral responsibility to prevent or restrict what they record," said Paul Stewart, speaking on behalf of the BPC.
"It is a matter for their editors to control what is published or broadcast, not the police. Once images are recorded, we have no power to delete or confiscate them without a court order, even if we think they contain damaging or useful evidence."
"The police seem to feel that there is some kind of gentleman's agreement that says that we will always pixellate the face of armed officers. This is not the case and any blurring or pixellation of images would be done by the picture desk on a case by case basis. The report in the Press Gazette stated that the police, 'will be issuing guidelines to all London papers soon.' We are relieved to have been assured by the Met Police that this is not in fact true."
Tags (click tag to find related articles; click icon for feed):
photographers
|
met police
|
pixellation
|
pixellate
|
firearms
|
Sign up here for our free, daily email newsletter to get all the latest stories, jobs, tips and more.
Got a story? Call our news team on +44 (0)1273 384290 or email them.
Other recent news
News feed- ABCe figures: Guardian.co.uk breaks 25m unique users in October figures
- Disagreement among Guardian journalists to influence new book on changing news standards
- Daily Mirror archives from 1903 made available to public online
- Trinity Mirror implements company-wide pay freeze
- Members list still available but journalists and bloggers fear breaking BNP injunction
- >> more news
Related news
Recent blog posts
Editors' blog feed- Welcome to a ‘Charlian’ page. Nothing but Charlie Brooker.
- MoscowTimes.ru: Judge reverses decision on public trial for the murder of Politkovskaya
- Guardian.co.uk: Online Financial Times ’should be pink with embarrassment over its redesign’
- PaidContent: Could the halt to renovation plans be a blow to News Corp’s other plans?
- Ofcom: The UK is leading internationally as a ‘digitally advanced nation’
- >> more blog posts
Features
Features feed- Knight News Challenge 2008: Paul Bradshaw's Help Me Investigate.com
- Photographer's nightmare: 'friend' claimed Burmese images as his own
- Between the covers: women's magazines through history
- 'Insane' traffic for the NYTimes.com election dashboard, says head of newsroom interactive technologies
- Regional newspapers: Why the UK's north east press is getting it right online
- >> more features
JOB OF THE WEEK
Content manager
Reporting to the head of communications, this exciting, newly created role will involve working closely with NFU policy teams to identify writing opportunities for various internal and external media ...more
Freelancers for hire
...see allDISPLAY ADVERTISING
Target our journalism community of 16,000 subscribers and 100k+ visitors monthly. Call Ellie on 01273 384291


Comments
No comments
You must be registered in order to post a comment. Click here to register or login below if you are already registered:
Forgotten your password? Please click here