BSkyB hits back: 'We are a fit and proper broadcaster'

Gideon Spanier
Thursday 03 May 2012 10:05 BST
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BSkyB chief executive Jeremy Darroch has insisted that the pay-TV giant is a "fit and proper" broadcaster despite a Commons committee ruling that its leading shareholder, Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation, had exhibited "willful blindness" over phone-hacking.

Mr Darroch, who was reporting record third-quarter profits, said Sky had a "strong corporate governance and culture" and this meant that media regulator Ofcom should not revoke its broadcasting licence.

"Sky and News Corporation are different organisations," he said. "We strongly believe Sky's track record as a broadcaster is the most important factor in deciding whether we should hold a licence."

The Sky boss, who was speaking for the first time since James Murdoch quit as chairman a month ago, also said the board was "very clear in its support" for him to stay on as a non-executive director.

In a symbolic move, the younger Mr Murdoch was yesterday appointed as chairman of Sky's Bigger Picture committee in charge of its environmental and sustainability efforts.

However, his continued presence is controversial because Ofcom is looking at Sky's "controlling directors and shareholders" as part of its "fit and proper" test and could force News Corp to sell down its 39 per cent stake or even revoke its broadcasting licence.

Ofcom is also looking at Sky News after it admitted illegally hacking into emails over a 2008 story that exposed how "canoe man" John Darwin faked his disappearance. Mr Darroch insisted that the case was "justified in the public interest".

The Sky boss said he remains "focused on the business", and pre-tax profits for the nine months to March jumped to £899m against £705m a year earlier. Revenues rose 5 per cent at £5.1bn. The pay-TV giant was boosted by its Formula 1 coverage as 159,000 new and existing TV customers upgraded to more expensive, high-definition (HD) during the last quarter.

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