Yes. This is an extraordinary publication, which I am hoping to try to find time next week to do a detailed rebuttal of.
Our journalism has been under absolute constant attack by the Sri Lankan government since we started this. We have an independent television regulator in the U.K. called Ofcom, the Office of Communications, to which any member of the public can submit a complaint if any television program is, in their view, unfair, misleading, misrepresenting, or whatever. It's an independent regulator, and a regulator that is more than happy to find TV broadcasts at fault if they are indeed at fault.
The Sri Lankan government orchestrated—quite clearly they orchestrated—over 100 complaints about our first two television programs, including what I think is the longest complaint that Ofcom has ever received, allegedly from a member of the public. In fact, it was 600 pages long, written by lawyers, and an incredibly detailed attack on which a lot of the content of this book is now based. Every single one of those complaints was considered by the Ofcom regulator. Obviously, we had to submit at great length long defences to all of these allegations. Every single one of them was rejected, and that's extremely unusual. Not a single damn point was upheld in any of the complaints by the independent regulator.
The fact is that our journalism has stood up to the most extraordinary scrutiny. They have continued to do this. They published a 220-page book, a full, large book, which I have a copy of, which they initially were going to distribute to every single journalist. I've had various academics and journalists here in Britain phone me to tell me that they've now been sent it. It is an absolutely scurrilous and unsubstantiated document full of the most.... Ironically, they call it, Corrupted Journalism: Channel 4 and Sri Lanka. It is, in fact, in itself the most appalling piece of journalism, with misrepresentations, and so on. It does things like quote at great length Jaffna University teachers.... I can't recall exactly what they call it; I don't have it in front of me. It quotes documents at great length that it cites as supporting their case, which, if you actually read the document, completely condemn their case and indeed back up everything that we have said.
It is an extraordinary, very expensive exercise in public relations, which has clearly been funded. We don't know who funded it, but it certainly is impossible to imagine who else would want to fund it besides the Sri Lankan government. It's a disgraceful and appalling document, which I am hoping to find time next week to try to do a detailed rebuttal of. It won't be that difficult, but it will take time.