Terry Milewski

Terry Milewski

Terry Milewski at University of Regina.
Born 1949/1950 (age 65–66)[1]
Nationality English, Canadian
Education Shrewsbury School
Occupation Journalist
Employer CBC News
Children 2

Terry Milewski (born 1949 or 1950) is a Canadian journalist, who is the senior correspondent for CBC News.[2] Prior to his current post, he was based in Vancouver. Milewski has come under fire from major political actors at times during his career for his reporting.[3]

Milewski has reported in television, radio, and print media, from many places around the world. Assignments have included Ottawa, Calgary, Jerusalem, Europe, the Middle East, South America and the United States. He emigrated to Canada from the United Kingdom.

Early life

Milewski's parents immigrated to the United Kingdom before he was born. His father was a Polish medical student who fled Warsaw to serve with the 7th Armoured Division in North Africa.[4] He completed his training in Edinburgh, where he met Milewski's mother, who was the daughter of an Egyptian doctor and a Scottish mother. She grew up in an upper-class family in Alexandria and attended boarding school in Scotland as a child. She was disowned for marrying a non-Muslim.[4]

Milewski attended the Shrewsbury School, where he won the school's upriver swim.[4] He dropped out of the University of Oxford after a six-month illness and later left Keele University after he was caught sunbathing in the nude.[4]

Career

After leaving university, Milewski became a lifeguard and a disc jockey, and played in a blues band. He moved to Canada, where he worked first in a sawmill and then at radio stations in Williams Lake and Nanaimo, British Columbia.[4]

1998 Asian Pacific Economic Conference protest coverage

In 1998, the office of Prime Minister Jean Chrétien complained that Milewski had been "biassed" (sic) in his coverage of protests at the 1997 Asian Pacific Economic Conference (APEC) summit in Vancouver, and Milewski was suspended for three days from the CBC.[5] Milewski's investigations of Chretien's possible connections to the RCMP attack on peaceful protestors at the summit were persistent, and the controversy eventually compelled Solicitor General Andy Scott to resign his cabinet post. The alleged bias was found in some remarks in e-mails between Milewski and arrested protestor Craig Jones, as well as in providing coverage of protestors' points of view.

The CBC reported that its Ombudsman, Marcel Pepin, over a five-month period, reviewed all of Milewski's TV reporting and communications with sources concerning APEC. He concluded that Milewski's reports "cannot be faulted from the point of view of accuracy and fairness." Pepin found that "...concerns that Milewski was one-sided were not justified." At the time of the finding, the CBC also reported that Milewski was serving an 18-day suspension, but that "...Milewski was not suspended because of his journalism but for other undisclosed reasons." It emerged that these "other" reasons were Milewski's public insistence that his conduct and his reporting were sound. Pepin further credited Milewski with "aggressive and critical journalism" which was valuable both to the journalism community and to the public at large.[6]

2006 Sikh documentary

In 2006, Milewski reported in a documentary for the CBC that a minority within Canada's Sikh community was gaining political influence even while publicly supporting terrorist acts in support of the struggle for an independent Sikh state. The World Sikh Organization (WSO) sued the CBC for "defamation, slander and libel", alleging that Milewski linked it to terrorism and damaged the reputation of the WSO within the Sikh community. However, no error was shown in the documentary and it remained unaltered on the CBC website. [7][8]

In December of 2015, the WSO unconditionally abandoned "any and all claims" made in its lawsuit.

2011 Canadian federal election

After the motion of non-confidence had passed by the House of Commons, at the press conference Milewski accused Michael Ignatieff of not being forthcoming about forming a coalition with the other opposition parties should the ruling Conservatives not win a majority, saying “Surely this coalition monkey is going to stay on your back every day of the campaign? Because people will assume that if you don’t rule it out, that’s because you’ve got something to hide.” Ignatieff maintained "if you want to replace the Harper government, you’ve got to vote Liberal. It can’t be clearer than that".[9]

2014 Opposition to reporting on global surveillance revelations

In a speech by Glenn Greenwald in Ottawa on October 25, 2014, which was broadcast by C-SPAN, Greenwald and journalist Jesse Brown alleged that Terry Milewski, as a CBC News senior correspondent was responsible for a major CBC resistance into reporting the facts about global surveillance , object of the documents provided by Edward Snowden. Brown claimed that Milewski was ideologically opposed to reporting those facts, regardless the fact that they were being reported widely by all major newspapers all over the world.[10][11]

In response, Milewski challenged Brown and Greenwald to square their allegations with his actual published critiques of government policy on mass surveillance. One called those plans "Orwellian." Another criticised the lack of parliamentary oversight of Canada's spy agency. A third contradicted then-Prime Minister Stephen Harper's claim that Canada did not use metadata as a surveillance tool. Brown and Greenwald did not respond to Milewski's challenge.

Personal life

Milewski is married with two children.[4]

References

External links

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