Top Story
May 9, 2021
LONDON: The lawyers for ‘Mail on Sunday’ and reporter, David Rose, have pleaded the London High Court seeking more time to file defence in a defamation case brought by former Punjab chief minister, Shahbaz Sharif and Ali Imran Yousuf, his son-in-law.
The court sources have confirmed that the defence lawyers for the Associated Newspapers Limited (ANL), publishers of Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday, pleaded the court seeking four more months to gather evidence from Pakistan, citing Covid-9 pandemic restrictions as the reason for delay in gathering evidence, and therefore, failing to meet the deadline set for the submission of the evidence. Justice Sir Matthew Nicklin of the London High Court had set a timeline in the first week of February 2021, asking the paper to submit evidence by the end of April 2021. Last week, the defence lawyers submitted a plea to the court seeking two more months to gather evidence.
Top Story
May 9, 2021
LONDON: The lawyers for ‘Mail on Sunday’ and reporter, David Rose, have pleaded the London High Court seeking more time to file defence in a defamation case brought by former Punjab chief minister, Shehbaz Sharif and Ali Imran Yousuf, his son-in-law.
The court sources have confirmed that the defence lawyers for the Associated Newspapers Limited (ANL), publishers of Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday, pleaded the court seeking four more months to gather evidence from Pakistan, citing Covid-9 pandemic restrictions as the reason for delay in gathering evidence, and therefore, failing to meet the deadline set for the submission of the evidence. Justice Sir Matthew Nicklin of the London High Court had set a timeline in the first week of February 2021, asking the paper to submit evidence by the end of April 2021. Last week, the defence lawyers submitted a plea to the court seeking two more months to gather evidence.
Daily Mail seeks more time to submit evidence in Shahbaz Sharif defamation case
By
Saturday May 08, 2021
LONDON: The lawyers for Mail on Sunday and reporter David Rose have approached the London High Court seeking more time to file a defence in the defamation case brought against them by former Punjab chief minister Shahbaz Sharif and Imran Ali Yousaf, his son-in-law.
Court sources have confirmed that lawyers for the Associated Newspapers Limited (ANL), publishers of
Daily Mail and
Mail on Sunday, sought four more months to gather evidence from Pakistan.
Justice Sir Matthew Nicklin at the London High Court had set a timetable in the first week of February 2021 asking the paper to submit the evidence by the end of April 2021. Last week, the lawyers for the paper made an application to the court seeking two more months.
The German government yesterday rejected the US-backed proposal to
waive all intellectual property rights to COVID vaccines.
A government spokesperson said in a statement to
multiple media outlets that the limiting factors in the production of vaccines
were the production capacities and high-quality standards, not patents.
She added that the US suggestion to waive patent protection
for COVID vaccines had significant implications for vaccine production as a
whole.
“The protection of intellectual property is a source of innovation and
must remain so in the future.
Other European government heads, however, expressed support
for the proposal to waive IP rights for COVID vaccines. French president
Meghan Markle Wins Last Copyright Claim Against UK Tabloid, Sole Author Of Letter To Father
KEY POINTS
Meghan Markle has won the last of her copyright claim over the publication of a letter to her estranged father
Associated Newspapers earlier suggested that she may not have been the sole copyright owner of the letter
Former communications secretary Jason Knauf denied co-writing the private letter the duchess sent to Thomas Markle
Meghan Markle has won the final round in her copyright claim against the publisher of the U.K. tabloids Mail on Sunday and Mail Online over the publication of a letter she sent to her father in August 2018.