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News Corp chief Rupert Murdoch (R) his wife Wendi Deng (C) and son Lachlan (L) leave their London home on April 26, 2012.British parliamentary report said Tuesday, May 1, 2012 that Rupert Murdoch had showed "wilful blindness" over phone hacking at his News of the World tabloid and was not fit to run a major company. Image Credit: AFP

London: A British parliamentary report said Tuesday that Rupert Murdoch had showed "wilful blindness" over phone hacking at his News of the World tabloid and was not fit to run a major company.

"We conclude, therefore, that Rupert Murdoch is not a fit person to exercise the stewardship of a major international company," the cross-party culture committee said in its long-awaited 121-page report, entitled "News International and Phone-Hacking".

Disgrace

The 81-year-old tycoon's British newspaper wing, News International, also misled parliament during its inquiry into the scandal at the tabloid, which Murdoch closed down in disgrace in July 2011.

"If at all relevant times Rupert Murdoch did not take steps to become fully informed about phone-hacking, he turned a blind eye and exhibited wilful blindness to what was going on in his companies and publications," the report said.

The report singled out former News International executive chairman Les Hinton, former News of the World legal manager Tom Crone and the newspaper's final editor Colin Myler as having misled the committee.

Rupert Murdoch and his son James, who was News International's chairman and chief executive at the time, both gave evidence to the committee on July 19 last year, when Murdoch senior was attacked with a foam pie by a protester.

'Contempt for the truth'

The report said parliamentary committees relied on the "truthfulness and completeness" of evidence but said the "behaviour of News International and certain witnesses in this affair demonstrated contempt for that system in the most blatant fashion".

The panel said it was now for parliament's lower House of Commons to decide "what punishment should be imposed" on those it thinks have treated the committee with contempt.