Shortlist announced for Paul Foot Award
Sunday Times journalists on shortlist for second year running, alongside investigations into phone hacking and DNA testing
Sunday Times journalists on shortlist for second year running, alongside investigations into phone hacking and DNA testing
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The phone hacking scandal, MPs seeking cash for influence and the detention of asylum seekers' children are just some of the shortlisted entries for this year's Paul Foot Award .
The award, which was set up by Private Eye and the Guardian in memory of campaigning journalist Paul Foot who died in 2004, recognises the year's best examples of investigative journalism.
The overall winner will receive £5,000 in a ceremony on 2 November and each runner-up will be awarded £1,000. Last year's prize was won by Ian Cobain for his investigation into Britain's involvement in the torture of terror suspects detained overseas for the Guardian.
"It is always a cheering experience, giving the lie to any impression that investigative journalism is no longer so important to contemporary editors as it was," judges chairman Brian MacArthur says in the Guardian's Media section today .
"One pleasure is the unexpected entries: it isn't only the big beasts who impress. There was a creditable entry from Horse and Hound on equine cruelty, for instance; another from John Hoyte's website exposing the threat to airline passengers from aerotoxic fumes; and investigative reporters still flourish on regional evenings and weeklies." The six shortlisted entries as announced by Private Eye are below:
Highly commended entries from the longlist include Andrew Gilligan (Sunday Telegraph) on the fundamentalist infiltration of Tower Hamlets and Nina Lakhani (Independent on Sunday) on the fate of NHS whistleblowers.