New York, Sunday, January 4,
2004 FOCUS ON ISSUES Financial
scandal threatens world of pro-Israel
media baron By Richard Allen Greene LONDON, Jan. 4 (JTA) -
One of the world's most
vocally pro-Israel newspaper barons looks
set to lose his media empire. In the wake of financial scandals,
Conrad Black, who controls the
Jerusalem Post, the Chicago
Sun-Times and the Daily
Telegraph of London, along with more
than 140 smaller newspapers, almost
certainly will have to sell at least some
titles. Black's Hollinger International is the
third-largest newspaper group in the world
in number of readers, behind Rupert
Murdoch's News Corporation and
Gannett. Its 23 daily newspapers have a
worldwide combined circulation of about 2
million, according to company figures. The Daily Telegraph is Britain's
best-selling quality daily, with about
900,000 copies printed per day. It also is one
of the strongest supporters of Israel -
so much so that many people assume
Black is Jewish, which he is
not. Under Black, the Telegraph was
one of the first British newspapers to
call attention to the resurgence of
anti-Semitism, media commentator Alex
Brummer said. "The Telegraph latched onto this stuff
much earlier than some of the rest of the
press and has tried to redress the
balance," said Brummer, a financial
journalist at Britain's Daily Mail
who also writes a media column for the
Jewish Chronicle in London. Eric Moonman, president of the
Zionist Federation in Britain, praised the
Telegraph for "providing a platform
for a
balanced
approach" to the Middle East, "unlike the
Guardian and the
Independent," which many Israel
supporters see as hostile. But that may be about to change. In November, Black admitted that he
accepted unauthorized payments of $7.2
million from companies he runs. David Radler, Hollinger's
president and chief operating officer,
received a further $7.2 million, and two
other Hollinger executives took smaller
unauthorized payments, according to a
company statement released Nov. 17. The money came from rival newspaper
groups in exchange for promises not to set
up competing publications. An internal investigation demanded by
Hollinger shareholders found that the
funds should have gone into company
coffers, not executives' pockets. Radler has resigned and Black has
agreed to pay the money back with
interest, the company statement said. But
the internal investigation uncovered other
irregularities that Black seems unlikely
to weather. The scandal allegedly involves shifting
money and debts between various companies
Black controls and is now under
investigation by the Securities and
Exchange Commission, Wall Street's
financial regulator. A criminal
investigation in New York also is
possible. Black stepped down as CEO of Hollinger
International on Nov. 21 after admitting
to the unauthorized payments. He remains
chairman of the Telegraph Group and
non-executive chairman of Hollinger
International. Hollinger has hired the Wall Street
investment bank Lazard to review the
company's future. Brummer, the media commentator, said
retaining Lazard was an indication that
Black would not be able to hang onto his
newspapers. "He has essentially admitted defeat by
handing over to Lazard," Brummer said. "It
is possible he will be able to hang onto
one or two titles, but it looks very
unlikely." A spokeswoman for Hollinger rejected
Brummer's analysis. "It is not a foregone conclusion that
newspapers will be sold," Molly Morse of
corporate-communications specialist Kekst
told JTA. "Lazard's mission is to determine
what's best for shareholders," she said,
adding that the sale of some or all
Hollinger titles was possible - but that
none necessarily was on the block. A change in ownership could affect the
newspapers' editorial stance, since Black
takes a strong interest in the content of
his publications. Max Hastings, a former editor of
the Telegraph, has written that Black
regularly phoned him at home to discuss
current events for an hour or more. Stephen Glover, a media
columnist for the Spectator
magazine, which is published by the
Telegraph Group, also said the proprietor
helped set
editorial tone. "He hasn't involved himself in the
day-to-day sense in the editorial, but has
been a presiding presence and a guiding
hand," he told the BBC. Possible buyers have been circling
since word of Hollinger's difficulties
leaked out over the summer. Only one potential white knight has
been mentioned as a possible buyer for the
entire empire, the American financier
Nelson Peltz. But many
publishers - many of them Jewish -
would be interested in buying some
parts of the Hollinger stable. Richard Desmond, the publisher
of Britain's Daily Express and a
Jew, is considered a leading contender for
the Telegraph because he is
co-owner of the printing presses the
newspaper uses. Desmond reportedly has the right to buy
the Telegraph's share of the
printing plant if the paper changes hands
- which could leave any other new owner
with no place to print the paper. Desmond's status as a donor to
Britain's governing Labor Party may work
in his favor if government-competition
regulators consider a bid from him,
experts say. The Zionist Federation's Moonman said
Desmond had been friendly and supportive
of Israel as proprietor of the
Express. But though he is unlikely to change the
Telegraph's pro-Israel stance, some
Jews are wary of Desmond because he owns a
number of adult
magazines and television
channels. New York media mogul Mortimer
Zuckerman, a past chairman of the
Conference of Presidents of Major American
Jewish Organizations, has been mentioned
as a possible buyer for some of
Hollinger's North American titles. Zuckerman, the chairman of the New York
Daily News, is reported to be
interested in the Chicago Sun-Times
and the New York Sun, in which
Hollinger holds a minority stake. Zuckerman is reported to be working on
a joint bid with Associated Newspapers,
the publisher of the Daily Mail in
Britain. Zuckerman could not be reached
for comment. The Washington Post also is
considered a potential buyer of at least
some Hollinger titles. Brummer said he doubted a change of
ownership would substantially affect the
editorial line of the right-leaning
Jerusalem Post, which Hollinger has
owned since 1988. He said that stance was partly a result
of market forces, with the Jerusalem
Post staking out territory on the
right and the left-leaning Ha'aretz
occupying the ideological left with its
English edition. Similar market pressures could keep the
Telegraph in Britain's pro-Israel camp, he
said. Moonman, for his part, said it was
critical for any new owner to retain key
members of the Telegraph's
editorial staff. "The essential point is that it
provides some balanced journalism. A lot
will depend on the quality of the
columnists remaining" if the paper is
sold, he said. "And anybody who is taking
over would want to maintain the
team." ...
on this wesbite about Conrad Black and his
newspaper empire -
Scores of
leading personalities whom Black
corrupted with such retainers and
investments
-
Hollinger
International, the publisher of the
London Daily Telegraph and the Chicago
Sun-Times, said Conrad Black would step
down as chief executive officer over
$US32 million unauthorised payments to
executives, including Lord Black, that
weren't authorised by the
board
-
Conrad
Black's Jerusalem Post calls for the
murder of Yasser Arafat
-
Another
over-greedy puppeteer Australian
Frank Lowy defends $12.38 million
bonus, won't step down as head of
Westfield's remuneration
committee
-
Flashback: When
Barbara Amiel, the wife of Spectator
owner Conrad Black, found it in her
heart to write truly wonderful things
about David Irving
- Taki
makes friends at Conrad Black's garden
party
-
Battling B.C. Journalist Doug
Collins writes to craven publisher
Conrad Black
-
The
New Statesman, a leading British
weekly, has raised the specter of
Jewish control over the media and
government.
-
An
email letter circulating in London
identifies the Jewish directors of the
British media
-
"You
don't understand, Max. My entire
interests in the United States and
internationally could be seriously
damaged by this" - Black to Max
Hastings
-
French
envoy to UK recalled (Black's wife
repeated private dinner-party remark
about Israel)
-
On-line
edition of David Irvings irregular and
scurrilous newsletter Action Report.
-
Robert
Fisk accused BBC of buckling to Israeli
pressure to drop the use of
"assassination"
-
Frances
ambassador to Britain cannot remember
referring to Israel as that sh*tty
little country during a private
conversation with a newspaper owner,
his spokesman said on
Wednesday.
-
On-line
edition of David Irving's irregular and
scurrilous newsletter Action
Report.
-
On-line
edition of David Irving's irregular and
scurrilous newsletter Action
Report.
-
David
Irving watches the state procession of
the Queen Mother's coffin, and comments
on the new England
-
David
Irving jots some thoughts in his
irregular Radical''s Diary: the growth
of hidden censorship in
Britain
-
Barbara
Amiel writes truly wonderful things
(among some gratuitous smears) about
David Irving
-
Amazon.com
tells Jerusalem Post to stop claiming
the company supported Israel
|