The National Enquirer celebrity magazine has apologised to Britney Spears in
its British edition for reporting that the pop star was ready to divorce her
husband Kevin Federline.
"In the 5th and 12th June 2006 issues of the UK Enquirer, we published
articles under the headlines 'Britney Marriage is Over!' and 'Britney and Kevin:
And Now Their Divorce!'" the Enquirer said in its latest edition on news stands
on Tuesday.
"Contrary to what our articles might have suggested, we now accept that their
marriage is not over and they are not getting divorced," the British National
Enquirer added.
"These allegations are untrue and we now accept Britney's position that the
statements are without foundation. We apologise for any distress caused," it
added.
Paul Tweed, Spears' libel lawyer based in Belfast, told the BBC that the
apology was a "rare if not unprecedented gesture".
While it was not clear if the articles also appeared in the U.S. edition, the
successful legal action against the British National Enquirer highlights how the
country's libel laws are considered more plaintiff-friendly than in the United
States.
London is dubbed the libel capital of the world, because the burden of proof
is on a publication that produces contentious material, as opposed to in the
United States where the claimant must prove an article is either wrong or
printed maliciously.
Spears, 24, has seen her marriage and parenting skills under a media
microscope in recent months, and in an interview aired in the United States in
June she admitted to being an "emotional wreck".
She has denied she is estranged from her husband, saying he had helped her
weather the ups and downs of her second pregnancy.
Spears married dancer Federline in September, 2004, and gave birth to their
first child, a son named Sean Preston, the following September. Federline has
two other children by his former girlfriend, actress Shar
Jackson.