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Northern Ireland, “Communications breakthrough for the Protocol”? – Fergal McGoldrick

With local, and occasionally, national, politics currently convulsed by the ‘Northern Ireland Protocol’, one could be forgiven for swiftly consigning anything containing those words to the dustbin.

Happily, for those who practise in the field of media and communications at least, the Lady Chief Justice has recently introduced a new Protocol in Northern Ireland to aid the management and early exchanges of such claims, effective from 4 October 2022.

Entitled “Pre-Action Protocol for Defamation and Other Media and Communication Claims” [pdf], this Protocol reflects the reality that such claims are no longer confined to libel and slander, and follows the introduction of a similar protocol in England in late 2019.

Through a combination of Convention rights, domestic statutes, and ever-developing jurisprudence, publishers, broadcasters and legal professionals are now just as likely to face (or threaten) claims in misuse of private information, breach of confidence, data protection and harassment as those more ‘traditional’ types of claim.

The most significant changes in the Protocol are:

Perhaps surprisingly, the Protocol does not expressly address emergency injunctive claims which occasionally arise in Northern Ireland where a plaintiff contends that as a result of a forthcoming publication or broadcast, their Article 2/Article 3 rights are engaged (normally as a result of an alleged paramilitary threat, or self-harm concern). One assumes however, even though not expressly referred to,  a Court will expect the parties to adopt the same degree of particularisation at an early stage in such applications.

This post originally appeared on the Carson McDowell website and is reproduced with permission and thanks

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