logo
Ex-BBC journalist says covering Bloody Sunday sparked decades-long career

Ex-BBC journalist says covering Bloody Sunday sparked decades-long career

Glasgow Times6 days ago
Peter Taylor, 82, from Henley on Thames, Oxfordshire, subsequently dedicated a large portion of his working life to documenting events in Northern Ireland.
During the Troubles he interviewed republican and loyalist inmates in a notorious prison which he said had not been accessed before, or in the same way since.
He also tracked down and spoke to an MI5 officer who he said was 'central to getting the IRA to commit to peace' in a secret mission.
As he was made a Commander of the British Empire (CBE), Mr Taylor told the Princess Royal that his first assignment in Northern Ireland was covering Bloody Sunday for ITV's This Week.
On January 30 1972, British soldiers shot dead 13 civil rights protesters on the streets of Londonderry.
Speaking to the PA news agency at Windsor Castle on Tuesday, after being honoured for services to journalism and public service broadcasting, he said: 'I remember being shocked at what happened and feeling guilty that I knew nothing, or very little, about the background to the conflict.
'I remember that day thinking I better start trying to find out, so I spent the past 50 years trying to do exactly that.'
It took him nearly 10 years of work to get permission to make a documentary inside the high-security Maze Prison housing paramilitaries, which is no longer in operation.
It was otherwise known as Long Kesh and was the site of 1981 hunger strikes.
People serving sentences for murder 'and a whole series of dreadful atrocities' were inside, Mr Taylor said, adding that he gained their trust to be interviewed.
Mr Taylor being made a CBE (Jonathan Brady/PA)
The conversations were conducted without prison officers' oversight, he added.
At Windsor Castle, the former BBC journalist told PA: 'In the end, when they saw the film they were glad that they had taken part because it gave a different view of the contribution that they were potentially prepared to make towards peace.
'You know you've succeeded when you get that kind of reaction, when they're clearly expecting to take you to the cleaners for what you've done, and they say 'wasn't bad for a Brit'.'
He earned the trust of major figures including former IRA commander Martin McGuinness, whose funeral he attended, and Ian Paisley, previous leader of the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), whose memorial he was invited to.
The aim was 'to get behind the mask' and that 'required them trusting me, but me trusting them to be as straight as they were prepared to be'.
'They knew I had a job to do, so when I asked really difficult questions – which in most cases they tried to answer, they knew that was part of my job – they didn't take it personally, but they knew what I was trying to do.'
Another major scoop was accessing the 'back channel between MI5 and the IRA' leadership.
The security service ran a secret mission designed to 'encourage the IRA to stop killing people and engage in the political process', he said.
Mr Taylor meeting the Princess Royal (Jonathan Brady/PA)
The MI5 officer, unearthed by Mr Taylor and his team, was 'part and parcel' of that process.
He 'flatly denied' working for MI5 when Mr Taylor first approached, but the journalist left his calling card and a book he had written titled The Provos: The IRA And Sinn Fein.
Around 20 years after Mr Taylor first started working on the story, the officer wrote to him and said he had watched his documentary My Journey Through the Troubles.
'He said, if there are any gaps in your knowledge that you would like to sort out, I'm now prepared to talk to you.'
Mr Taylor travelled to interview him on the condition of anonymity.
Fewer programmes like Mr Taylor's are now made because of lack of funding, he said, adding that his did not attract 'huge viewing figures'.
'My worry is that public service broadcasting and the climate in which I grew up and learned my trade is under threat,' he told PA.
'It needs finances. What we do, people like me try and do, is to help people understand and make political choices and pass judgments on these extremely difficult, complex issues.'
The public's appetite is changing too, he said, adding: 'People just grow weary of bombs, mayhem, murder, bad news.'
Young people need to 'carry the torch onwards', which is 'a hard ask' because getting jobs and story commissions is increasingly difficult, he said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Adult social care vacancies down but domestic recruitment still ‘challenging'
Adult social care vacancies down but domestic recruitment still ‘challenging'

South Wales Guardian

time38 minutes ago

  • South Wales Guardian

Adult social care vacancies down but domestic recruitment still ‘challenging'

Posts filled by people with a British nationality since 2020/2021 fell by 7%. The Government has previously pledged to 'end the reliance on overseas recruitment' but Skills for Care's latest report has said there must be a focus on 'how we attract and keep more people domestically'. In the most recent year alone, the twelve months to March, the number of posts filled by British nationals fell by 30,000, the organisation, which is the strategic workforce development and planning body for adult social care in England, said. The organisation measures posts filled rather than the number of people, because a person might hold more than one post and roles might also be shared. In rules which came into effect last week, new applications for care workers and senior care workers under the skilled worker visa were closed, as part of Government efforts in 'restoring control over the immigration system'. In April the Government implemented new rules saying that care providers would have to prove they had attempted to recruit a worker from within England, before looking overseas. The latest Skills for Care report said domestic recruitment 'remains challenging for the sector' and that the new immigration rules from July 'will make it more challenging for the sector to continue to grow in line with demand'. The organisation re-stated its previous projection that an extra 470,000 people will need to be employed in the sector by 2040 to meet the needs of a growing older population. The report said: 'A substantial increase in recruitment and retention of staff with a British nationality would likely be required to achieve this level of growth.' Under the previous Conservative government, a ban on international care workers bringing dependants to the UK led to a sharp drop in health and care visas in the months after the measure came in. The latest Skills for Care report said an estimated 50,000 people arrived in the UK in 2024/25 to start direct care-providing roles in the independent sector, down from 105,000 the previous year. Of the 50,000 recruited internationally, an estimated 10,000 came on a health and care worker visa, while the rest came on other routes, potentially including student visas and family members of people arriving in the UK on other visa types. Overall, the number of adult social care posts filled between 2023/24 and 2024/25 rose by 52,000 to 1.6 million. The vacancy rate has also fallen to 7.0%, with 111,000 vacant posts on any given day in the year to March. This is down from an 8.3% vacancy rate in the year to March 2024, when there were 126,000 vacant posts on any given day. The vacancy rate hit a high of 152,000 vacant posts a day in the 12 months to March 2022. Oonagh Smyth, Skills for Care's chief executive, said while the falling vacancy rate is 'encouraging', the sector 'can't afford to be complacent'. She said: 'We need to protect ourselves from the wild swings in vacancy rates driven by the wider economic picture. 'It's important to recognise that, while the vacancy rate in social care has reduced, it's still three times that of the wider economy.' She urged investment in 'stable recruitment and retention' and efforts to make roles 'more attractive to the domestic workforce over the long term' including through development opportunities, improving the quality of roles and supporting positive cultures within organisations. She added: 'We know there's lots more to do, though. Everyone, from Government to care providers, from regulators to frontline staff, has a role to play in building the workforce we need to deliver the best possible care and support for the people in our communities who draw on local services.' The Government has been contacted for comment. The Social Care Institute for Excellence said the drop in the vacancy rate was a 'cause for optimism' but the system remained 'precariously dependent' on overseas workers. Chief executive Kathryn Marsden said: 'This overreliance is not a sustainable strategy and it leaves the entire care system vulnerable to policy changes and political headwinds beyond its control.'

Colbert cancellation: Jay Leno blasts politics in late-night TV
Colbert cancellation: Jay Leno blasts politics in late-night TV

The Herald Scotland

timean hour ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Colbert cancellation: Jay Leno blasts politics in late-night TV

"I like to think that people come to a comedy show to kind of get away from the things, the pressures of life, wherever it might be," Leno said. "And I love political humor, don't get me wrong, but what happens (is) people wind up cozying too much to one side or the other. "Why shoot for just half an audience, why not try to get the whole (audience)?" he posed. Colbert's cancellation: A ratings crisis or a political bribe? We investigate While the interview, published July 22, appears to have taken place prior to the cancellation of CBS' "Late Show" with Stephen Colbert, his comments venture into an ongoing debate about the salience of a late-night lineup amid the Trump administration. Colbert, a frequent critic of President Donald Trump, announced the cancellation of not just his hosting gig, but also the network's late-night show, earlier this month. A successor to David Letterman, Colbert belongs to a class of comedians, including Jon Stewart and John Oliver, who've leaned heavily on political satire to draw laughs from their audience. Notably, though, even less politically-minded comics like Jimmy Fallon, who replaced Leno, and Jimmy Kimmel have opted for sharper critiques of the current president. Leno was off the air before Trump's first successful run for president in 2016, and served as host during the Obama, Clinton and both Bush presidencies from 1992 to 2009 and then again from 2010 to 2014. "I like to bring people into the big picture," Leno added in the interview. "I don't understand why you would alienate one particular group." "I'm not saying you have to throw your support or whatever, but just do what's funny," he said. "I don't think anybody wants to hear a lecture." Colbert's cancellation sent shock waves through the late-night comedy circuit and beyond, even drawing calls from some legislators for an investigation into CBS parent company Paramount's decision to axe the program. Paramount has maintained that the reason for Colbert's cancellation was financial. In a statement sent to USA TODAY previously, executives lauded the comedy host for his tenure and insisted that he was irreplaceable. Citing "a challenging backdrop in late night," the company said the cancellation was "not related in any way to the show's performance, content, or other matters happening at Paramount." Piers Morgan blasts Colbert, politicization of late-night Elsewhere, conservative commentator and British television host Piers Morgan in a post to X called Colbert's seeming left-wing tilt "damning." "Most of America's biggest late-night hosts have become nothing more than hyper-partisan activist hacks for the Democrats - a party that's rarely been more unpopular," Morgan wrote alongside a photo of the New York Post front page announcing the show's cancellation. "No wonder Colbert got canned," he added. Ahead of Colbert's cancellation, Paramount settled a defamation lawsuit with the president, a move viewed by some as a peace offering meant to improve the chances of a merger with Skydance Media before the FCC. The merger has since been approved.

Voting would be compulsory under plans to be lodged at Westminster
Voting would be compulsory under plans to be lodged at Westminster

Daily Record

timean hour ago

  • Daily Record

Voting would be compulsory under plans to be lodged at Westminster

EXCLUSIVE: Lord Foulkes will table an amendment to the upcoming elections bill. A Labour peer has urged the UK Government to introduce compulsory voting to boost turnout. ‌ Lord Foulkes said the prospect of a £20 fine would act as an 'encouragement' for people to take part in the democratic process. ‌ The Labour Government plans to lower the voting age to 16 in its upcoming elections bill. Foulkes, a former Labour MSP and MP, backs votes at 16 but wants Ministers to go further. He said the low turnout at the last general election - less than 60% - showed the system is 'broken'. ‌ He told the Record: 'As an increasing swathe of the population tunes out of politics, politicians increasingly position themselves in alignment with the voters who do vote, and will continue to turn out. 'So those who feel left out are increasingly left out and alienated, and those who vote gain more and more sway over policy direction." 'As a result our politics is at risk of becoming divided, alienating the poor and favouring the privileged, so it will no longer truly represent the many, catering instead to a diminishing number of politically engaged, privileged elites.' ‌ Foulkes' solution is for voting to be made compulsory - as it is in Australia - and he will lodge an amendment to the elections bill: 'We know it works – Australia introduced compulsory voting back in the 1920s, and their turnout has consistently exceeded 90% ever since. 'Even more impressively, at their latest election in 2025, youth enrollment was in the 80% plus range, as was indigenous enrolment. ‌ 'By comparison, youth and ethnic minority groups are significantly underrepresented in our electoral register, with only around 60% of British 20-24 year olds correctly registered, as of 2022. 'So it seems like a blindingly obvious solution to our looming democratic crisis." He said of possible sanctions: 'The reality is that a compulsory system, such as the one that operates in Australia, would not actually compel you to vote. ‌ "Instead a small (£20) fine would act as an encouragement to vote and, even then, you would still have the option to cast a spoiled ballot and not be penalised.' He added: 'There is really no down-side, which is why I am strongly in favour of introducing compulsory voting to the UK. 'Reform is in the air, in more ways than one, and I believe Labour must seize this opportunity to turn the tide on diminishing political engagement. The long-term health of our democracy is at stake.' ‌ Dr David Klemperer, Director of the Campaign for Compulsory Voting and Constitution Society Research Fellow, said: "While reforms like Votes at 16 and Automatic Voter Registration may have some positive impact on turnout, international evidence suggests that they are highly unlikely to be enough on their own to address the widening gaps in participation between different demographic groups. 'This is why we at the Campaign for Compulsory Voting will be pushing for the government to embrace the one reform that has been demonstrated internationally to be reliably capable of boosting turnout – the introduction of Australian-style compulsory voting." A spokesperson for the MHCLG department in the UK Government said: "We are delivering the most ambitious changes to our democracy for a generation, so we can boost engagement and restore trust in politics through our Plan for Change. 'Our focus is to improve voter registration by expanding the list of accepted voter IDs and creating an increasingly automated voter registration system so that everyone eligible has the opportunity to vote, and we have no plans to make it compulsory.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store