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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Business
Roy Greenslade

Daily Mail publishes correction to misleading EU migrants' story

The Daily entered into a dialogue over a complaint by InFacts.
The Daily Mail entered into a dialogue over a complaint by InFacts. Photograph: Dan Kitwood/Getty Images

One of the eight newspaper articles that appeared in a dossier last week of so-called “hateful” stories about the Brexit debate has been corrected.

The Daily Mail carried a correction on page 2 on Monday for a story published in February this year which claimed that EU migrants were convicted of 700 crimes a week. It said:

“In common with other newspapers, an article on February 17 said that criminal ‘convictions’ for EU migrants had gone up by 40% in five years with 700 being found guilty every week.

In fact, as the article went on to explain, the figures related to ‘notifications’, which include breaches of court orders and appeals as well as convictions.”

The correction was made following a complaint by InFacts, a group campaigning for Britain to remain in the European Union.

A similar article was published by the Mail’s companion website, Mail Online. It has now amended its original headline which said “Criminal convictions for EU migrants leap by 40% in five years: 700 found guilty every week in the UK...” to “Criminal notifications for EU migrants leap by 40% in five years: now there are 700 every week in the UK...”

InFacts lodged a series of complaints with the Independent Press Complaints Organisation (Ipso) about ERU referendum stories in the Mail, Mail Online, the Daily Telegraph and Daily Express.

But it held back from reporting the Mail and Mail Online over the criminal convictions story because Mail executives “engaged in a dialogue” with InFacts about the article.

Ipso has received the “hateful eight” dossier from InFacts, but I understand that its request for the complaints to be fast-tracked will be ignored.

Should Ipso fail to broker corrections to the complained-of stories in the coming weeks, any ruling by the complaints committee - one way or the other - would not be published until after the 23 June referendum vote.

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