Ex-Guardian boss hits out at IRA editor Roy Greenslade who ‘should have been frank about beliefs’
Ex-Guardian boss hits out at the IRA editor: Roy Greenslade ‘should have been frank about his beliefs’, says Alan Rusbridger
- Former editor of the Guardian Alan Rusbridger has said Roy Greenslade, who worked for him at the newspaper, should have been ‘frank’ about IRA support
- Rusbridger said Greenslade should have been honest about political beliefs
- Ex-Daily Mirror boss this week revealed his support for IRA bombing campaigns
Ex-Fleet Street editor Roy Greenslade should have been more honest over his ‘obnoxious’ lifelong support for the IRA, the former editor of the Guardian said yesterday.
Alan Rusbridger said Mr Greenslade, 74, who worked for him at the newspaper, ought to have been ‘frank about his own political beliefs and attachments’ when writing about Northern Ireland matters.
He urged his former newspaper to include disclaimers on articles which remain online.
Ex-Fleet Street editor Roy Greenslade (right) should have been more honest over his ‘obnoxious’ lifelong support for the IRA, the former editor of the Guardian Alan Rusbridger (left) said yesterday.
Mairia Cahill (pictured), who has waived her right to anonymity, said that after she was interviewed for a BBC Northern Ireland investigation, Mr Greenslade wrote an article in The Guardian attacking ‘the lack of political balance’ in the report
The Guardian is investigating a complaint made by Mairia Cahill, who was attacked in a 2014 article by Mr Greenslade after disclosing an alleged rape by an IRA member.
Mr Greenslade said the former Sinn Fein member should have disclosed that she was previously a ‘member of a dissident republican organisation with an anti-Sinn Fein agenda’ and accused a BBC documentary outlining her claims as ‘lacking political balance’ – while hiding his own support for the IRA and Sinn Fein.
In an article for the British Journalism Review, which emerged at the weekend, Mr Greenslade, a former editor of the Daily Mirror and journalism lecturer, described how he was a supporter of IRA violence and wrote for the republican newsletter An Phoblacht under a pseudonym.
While doing so, Mr Greenslade worked for newspapers which vociferously opposed IRA terrorism. He later became the Guardian’s long-standing media columnist, but occasionally wrote about Ulster, before retiring last year.
The former professor of journalism at City, University of London, was a friend of suspected Hyde Park bomber (pictured: The scene after the 1982 attack) John Downey and from the 1980s wrote for the republican newsletter An Phoblacht
Last night Mr Rusbridger, editor of the Guardian from 1995 to 2015, said: ‘All editors must wish he had been transparent at the time rather than leaving this until after he retired.
‘The best route to trust is transparency and I suspect all the editors that Roy worked for, not to mention the readers, wish Roy had been more transparent about his own political beliefs.’
Referring to the piece attacking Miss Cahill, he added: ‘I think it would have been better for Roy to have been frank about his own political beliefs and attachments.
‘I think it would serve readers well to append … the articles that remain online, noting what he has now made public about his beliefs and attachments.’
Mr Rusbridger stressed that Mr Greenslade had ‘no input into any Guardian editorial line on Northern Ireland’, adding: ‘I find support for the IRA obnoxious.’
A Guardian spokesman said its independent readers’ editor was investigating. Mr Greenslade could not be reached for comment.