The article reports on the move of Prime Minister David Cameron of Great Britain to release information from his tax returns over leaked information on offshore companies in Panama Papers which showed that Cameron's father was a director of an offshore trust that did not pay British taxes in 2016.
The article reports that Great Britain Prime Minister David Cameron accused the newspaper "The Guardian" of damaging national security after it published material leaked by the fugitive American intelligence contractor Edward J. Snowden.
*INTERNET pornography, *SEX on the Internet, *CHILDREN, *PREVENTION of child abuse
Abstract
The article offers the author's insights on whether online pornography affects children in Great Britain. Topics discussed include the Authority for Television on Demand in Britain, the effort of Prime Minister David Cameron to prevent the corrosion of childhood, and a report from the Children's Commissioner which examined 276 research papers on pornography and teenagers.
The article reports on the Great Britain's principal national news papers editors that met from Prime Minister David Cameron regarding an independent news media regulator establishment. It states that they declined Lord Justice Sir Brian Leveson most combative proposal for a law that puts teeth into state-sanctioned oversight system. It mentions that the law would risk gnawing 300 years in Great Britain press freedom by writing new regulatory system according to Cameron.
LONDON -- British papers have dubbed it ''horsegate.'' The story of Prime Minister David Cameron and his ride on a retired police horse in the Oxfordshire countryside appears, for now at least, to lack the elements of a full-blown scandal. But as political symbols go, the horse and its links to the tabloid newspaper scandal roiling the country seems likely to become, at the least, rich fodder for political satirists and cartoonists. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
LONDON -- In an embarrassing blow to Prime Minister David Cameron's coalition government, Downing Street's communications director, Andy Coulson, resigned on Friday amid continued questions about his possible involvement in the illegal hacking of celebrity telephone messages when he was editor of the tabloid newspaper The News of the World. Mr. Coulson left the paper in 2007 after one of its reporters, Clive Goodman, and a private investigator were jailed for intercepting messages left on the cellphones of members of the royal household. Mr. Coulson said he knew nothing about the messages and was hired by Mr. Cameron, then leader of the Conservative opposition. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
Published
2011
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.