John Ware (TV journalist)
John Ware is a British journalist, author, and investigative reporter. He has covered Northern Ireland since 1974.
He was at The Sun in Belfast from 1974 to 1977 and then a researcher on Granada/ITV's World in Action.
In 1981, he became a producer for World in Action. He also presented BBC's Rough Justice, Taking Liberties and Inside Story. He then worked the Worcester Evening News and Droitwich Guardian.
He was a reporter on the BBC public affairs documentary programme Panorama from 1986 to 2012. He joined Panorama as a reporter. Several of the cases profiled in the show were referred back to the Court of Appeal and several resulted in overturned convictions.
Ware has also written for The Sunday Telegraph, The Sunday Times, The Guardian, The Jewish Chronicle and Standpoint magazine.
Early life
Ware was educated at Hurstpierpoint College, a boarding school for boys near the village of Hurstpierpoint in West Sussex. He did not go to university.Career
BBC
According to the BBC, some of Ware's accomplishments while employed by the broadcaster include:- 1984, filming two Scotland Yard Flying Squad officers in the act of setting up an armed robbery. His evidence led to their trial at the Old Bailey.
- 1989, uncovering evidence that led the District Auditor and then the High Court to accuse Dame Shirley Porter of "gerrymandering", by attempting to rig the Westminster City Council's elections.
- 1990, discovering an attempt by paratroopers in Belfast to cover up the unlawful shooting of joyriders. The conviction for murder of the paratrooper, Lee Clegg, for this incident was ultimately quashed on appeal.
- 1996, reporting on human rights abuses in Saudi Arabia and how the Sharia courts condemned an innocent young man to public beheading.
- 1997, discovering papers belonging to the Deputy Prime Minister showing that, despite elections promises to the contrary, the new Labour government planned to privatise the London Underground within two months of taking office.
- 1998, unearthing evidence showing that Deborah Parry, one of the two "Saudi Nurses", was innocent of murdering Yvonne Gilford in 1996.
- 1998, securing evidence of secret price fixing deals between car dealers and three leading motor manufacturers, including Volvo, which led to the Director General of Fair Trading John Bridgeman to accuse the Swedish car giant of "disgraceful" conduct, while pointing out that under the government's proposed new competition laws, the company could have been fined £70m.
- 2000, reporting that, in contravention of New Labour's strict contest rules, the party's General Secretary and his senior officials were responsible for leaking a confidential list of London party members to Downing Street's London Mayoral candidate Frank Dobson, giving him an unfair advantage over rival candidate Ken Livingstone.
Islamic extremism
He has taken a particular interest in investigating Islamic extremism.- 2005: A Panorama edition Ware produced criticising the Muslim Council of Britain, A Question of Leadership, was described by them as "deeply unfair" and "a witch hunt". The programme attracted over 600 complaints within a week of its broadcast: Guardian journalist Madeleine Bunting described Ware's claims in the documentary as "veer erratically from the McCarthyite absurd to some legitimate accusations".
- 2006: Responding to complaints about another Panorama edition, Faith, Hate and Charity produced by Ware, the Charity Commission in 2009 dismissed its allegations that British based Palestinian relief charity Interpal was funding organisations involved in terrorism. The Muslim Council of Britain described Ware as "an agenda-driven pro-Israel polemicist". The programme resulted in the BBC paying undisclosed libel damages and giving a public apology to the general manager of Islamic Relief UK, who was prominently shown while not being a subject of the programme.
- 2010: Another Panorama edition by Ware, British schools, Islamic Rules on some Islamic teaching in Britain, was criticised by the Muslim Council of Britain as a partial and unbalanced portrayal.
Labour Party
In 2015, Ware reported for Panorama on Jeremy Corbyn's campaign to be elected as Labour Party leader. The programme, entitled Jeremy Corbyn: Labour's Earthquake, attracted hundreds of complaints, including from Corbyn's campaign team, and was described by a member of Corbyn's campaign team as "containing factual inaccuracies" and "a complete hatchet job".
In 2019, Ware reported on antisemitism in the Labour Party in an extended Panorama programme entitled Is Labour Anti-Semitic?. The programme was nominated for two 2019 British Journalism Awards in the 'Investigation' and 'Politics Journalism' categories. The Labour Party strongly condemned the report, describing it as containing "deliberate and malicious representations designed to mislead", with the party alleging that "Panorama has pre-determined the outcome of its investigation and is relying on unsubstantiated allegations and misrepresentation to come to its conclusions". Labour submitted a formal complaint about the programme to the BBC, but the BBC’s Executive Complaints Unit rejected this. Over 20 complaints of bias were taken to Ofcom, who ruled that the programme had in fact been "duly impartial" and had given appropriate weight to Labour's position. Following the programme, five of the whistleblowers announced their intention to sue the Party, claiming that Labour's response breached its commitment to protect the rights of whistleblowers and 'defamed' them. Ware himself has also launched legal action against the Labour Party, alleging it had libelled him in statements following the broadcast of the programme. On 22 July 2020, the Labour Party retracted a number of allegations that it had made in relation to both John Ware and a number of participants in the Panorama documentary in full, issued a formal apology, and agreed to pay damages and costs.
Media awards
- Current Affairs Home Award – 1983/1987
- Broadcast Journalist of the year – 2001 at the RTS Journalism Awards for "Who Bombed Omagh?" and "Spin Doctors", an investigation into the truthfulness of government claims about National Health Service spending and new initiatives.
- Commitment to Media Award from the Women's International Zionist Organization - 2015. Ware was commended for being "sympathetic to Jewish concerns". Stephen Pollard, editor of The Jewish Chronicle, said "I tell our trainees at the JC, that if there is one person they should model themselves on, it is John Ware."
Other activities
In 2012, Ware took voluntary redundancy from the BBC, but has continued with some freelance work. Since leaving the BBC, he has published articles about its top management.
In April 2020, he was part of a consortium which took over The Jewish Chronicle.