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22 November 2010updated 12 Oct 2023 10:22am

The truth about Andrew Gilligan

The Telegraph man’s links to Iran.

By Mehdi Hasan

As predictably as night follows day, Andrew Gilligan has responded on his Telegraph blog to my interview with the mayor of Tower Hamlets, Lutfur Rahman, last week. I suspected he wouldn’t be able to resist.

For those of you who haven’t followed Gilligan’s illustrious career since his role in “outing” Dr David Kelly, it’s worth being aware that, these days, the former BBC reporter is obsessed with “Islamists” and, in particular, Rahman. By my count, he has published about 15 blog posts on Rahman on the Telegraph website over the past month: that’s a ratio of one post every two days.

Obsession, perhaps, is an understatement. The man who came to global prominence by helping to expose the British government’s lies about Iraqi weapons of mass destruction is now “cyber-stalking” a local politician in the East End of London. How the mighty fall.

I’ll come on to Gilligan’s own links in a moment, but first, let me quickly deal with his blog post about my interview. Gilligan mocks what he describes as my “fearless and probing interview” of Rahman. If he and his friends in the right-wing, Islam-obsessed, McCarthyite blogosphere bothered to read the magazine, they’d know that the weekly “NS Interview” isn’t designed to be Paxman-esque. It’s a Q&A format that caters for interviewees as diverse as Rahman and Osama Bin Laden’s son, on the one hand, to Russell Brand and Sienna Miller, on the other.

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And the truth is, as the transcript of the full interview with Rahman shows, I still managed to question the mayor on all the main allegations against him (from his religious beliefs to his alleged links to “extremism” to the smear campaign against his Labour opponent) and, for the first time, we hear the man himself respond to each and every claim. But I guess Gilligan and his friends don’t want to hear the mayor put his side of the story, or defend gay rights, or publicly confirm his belief in secularism; they’d rather stick their fingers in their ears and chant, “La la la la, we can’t hear him!” Why bother with debate or discussion, when caricatures and smears serve you better?

In fact, on the secularism point, Gilligan chooses to quote selectively from the interview (I guess nothing’s changed since the Kelly affair), writing on his blog:

Sample extract:

Q: Do you believe in a secular Britain?

A: I do.

Phew! So that’s all right, then!

Umm. That’s not a “sample extract”. This is:

Do you believe in a secular Britain?

I do. I live in a society based on a clear division of powers between the church and the state. Yes, I absolutely believe in a secular society.

But what else should we expect, I suppose, from a journalist who long ago became a propagandist for Boris Johnson and the Tories and has since been accused of “sockpuppeting”, ie, creating, in the words of Wikipedia, “a false identity through which a member of an internet community speaks with or about himself or herself, pretending to be a different person”. (See here, here and here for details.)

Gilligan says on his blog that I have “form on defending the IFE [Islamic Forum of Europe]” even though I clearly stated, in a debate with Gilligan on Sky News over the summer, that I didn’t agree with the IFE agenda but that I’d rather trust the opinion of grass-roots groups such as London Citizens, which work with and support the IFE, than his own biased and selective “journalism”. I also challenged Gilligan to define Islamism in a coherent or consistent manner, live on air, which he was (surprise, surprise) unable to do.

In fact, in a previous blog post, in March, Gilligan included me among the “allies of Islamism”. I’m not sure how many allies of Islamism have criticised the concept of an “Islamic state”, denounced suicide bombings in Palestine and questioned Islam’s illiberal apostasy laws, but here’s a question: if I’m an ally of Islamism, then what’s Andrew Gilligan? Lest we forget, the man is a paid employee of the Islamic Republic of Iran. He hosts his own show on the state-funded English-language Iranian broadcaster, Press TV. (For the record, let me just point out here that, like Oliver Kamm, Iain Dale, Martin Bright and others, I have also occasionally appeared as a guest on Press TV – but not as a presenter! And, of course, I don’t spend my whole life hunting for Islamists, as Gilligan seems to.)

Here he is, interviewing his old enemy Ken Livingstone on Press TV:

As even the Spectator’s Rod Liddle, Gilligan’s friend, supporter and former boss, wrote in July 2009:

So what’s he doing – Gilligan – working for Press TV, the international propaganda channel run by the Iranian government?

Liddle continues:

“I’m not going to give you my reasons if you’re just going to rip the piss out of them,” he says on the phone from his holiday in the West Country.

“Well, how can I know if I’m going to rip the piss out of them before I’ve heard them, Andrew?”

He sighs a lot. I hope he is sighing because he knows he’s done a bad thing rather than because he’s been found out. He explains that at first he thought that Press TV was an agreeable symptom of social change and greater openness in Iran, though he adds, “I may have been wrong about that.” He says he has not worked for Press TV since the election and that its post-election coverage has been “flawed” (no kidding, dude). He “might” not work for it ever again. And how much did they pay you, Andrew?

“Not that much.”

How much, exactly?

“I’m not going to tell you that.”

Why not?

“Because I don’t want to. It’s private.”

Sources at Press TV tell me Gilligan is among the highest-paid, if not the highest-paid, employee at the channel. So, let’s get this straight. Gilligan is a journalist who makes lots of money from “outing” as many British Muslims as he can as “Islamists” or “extremists”, often on deeply dubious grounds, and with the aid of selective quotation, yet at the same time also makes lots and lots of money working for a foreign country that is explicitly, openly and proudly Islamist and based on the rule of the clerics and a version of sharia law.

In the aforementioned quote in the Spectator, by the way, from June 2009, Gilligan says he “might” not work for the channel ever again. But, of course, he didn’t stop working for the channel. The above YouTube clip is from a Gilligan show broadcast on Press TV this year, in the run-up to the general election.

Isn’t that ironic? The man who obsesses about Islamists under every British bed is himself a paid, high-profile employee of an an openly Islamist government: the mullahocracy of the Islamic Republic of Iran. Hilarious. And, of course, deeply hypocritical. (Unless, of course, Gilligan believes that the Tower Hamlets council under the leadership of Lutfur Rahman is more “extreme” or dangerous than the Iranian state. Judging by the volume of his blog posts on the subject, perhaps he does. But I, for one, haven’t yet spotted anyone being stoned to death on the streets of east London.)

So, Andrew, I ask you: when will you quit your lucrative job at Iranian-owned Press TV? And, until you do so, how can any of us take seriously your repeated complaints about the advance of “Islamism” in Britain? Feel free to leave your answers (excuses?) in the comment thread below the line – either as yourself, or perhaps in sockpuppet form. Cheers.

UPDATE:

I want to make a correction to this post. Andrew Gilligan has been in touch to make clear that he quit as a Press TV employee in December 2009 and no longer works for the channel – apart from two one-off shows that he presented for them in the run-up to this year’s general election.

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