Entertainment

Sun newspaper says J.K. Rowling article did not glorify domestic abuse

Britain's Sun newspaper said Friday it did not intend to glorify domestic violence by giving a platform to Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling's ex-husband just days after she revealed she had been a victim of domestic abuse.

'Our intention was to expose a perpetrator's total lack of remorse,' newspaper says in statement

Britain's Sun newspaper is defending an interview it published with J.K. Rowling's ex-husband, days after the author admitted she had been a victim of domestic abuse. (Evan Agostini/Invision/The Associated Press)

Britain's Sun newspaper said Friday it did not intend to glorify domestic violence by giving a platform to Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling's ex-husband just days after she revealed she had been a victim of domestic abuse.

Following a story headlined "I slapped JK and I'm not sorry," the newspaper took the unusual step of responding to criticism by insisting its sympathies were on the side of abuse victims. It also said it had a long history of campaigning against domestic violence.

"We were disgusted by the comments of J.K. Rowling's ex-husband and branded him 'sick' and 'unrepentant' in our coverage," the newspaper said. "It was certainly not our intention to 'enable' or 'glorify' domestic abuse. Our intention was to expose a perpetrator's total lack of remorse."

The newspaper reported that Rowling's first husband, Jorge Arantes, said he didn't care about her admission this week that she had been a survivor of domestic abuse.

"Yes. It is true I slapped her," he is quoted as saying. "But I didn't abuse her."

The story also ran in the Daily Mail.

Arantes could not immediately be reached for comment.

Online outrage

The article and the headline sparked outrage among campaigners who have long pushed the media to exercise care in reporting on domestic violence. Domestic abuse charity Refuge described the front-page story as being both irresponsible and disappointing.

"It would ordinarily be troubling for such an editorial decision to be made — but to run with this during lockdown, when demand to Refuge's national domestic abuse helpline have increased by 66 per cent is shocking," Refuge said in a statement.

"What this has done is give national media coverage to a perpetrator of domestic abuse to attempt to justify his actions."

Press regulator Ipso said it had received more than 500 complaints.

Rowling revealed she had been the victim of domestic abuse and sexual assault on Wednesday amid a controversy over her views on transgender issues, which have angered many trans activists.

In a series of tweets this week, Rowling said she supported trans rights but did not believe in "erasing" the concept of biological sex.

Rowling said she refused to "bow down" to a movement seeking "to erode 'woman' as a political and biological class and offering cover to predators like few before it."

The comments prompted Daniel Radcliffe and other cast members of the Potter films to publicly disagree with her. Rowling was unmoved and issued a statement explaining her views in which she discussed her past.

"I'm mentioning these things now not in an attempt to garner sympathy, but out of solidarity with the huge numbers of women who have histories like mine, who've been slurred as bigots for having concerns around single-sex spaces."

She also said that she had been sexually assaulted but did not identify the attacker.

WATCH | Rowling defends her tweets about transgender people:

J.K. Rowling defends comments about transgender people

4 years ago
Duration 4:21
Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling is continuing to defend her Twitter comments about transgender people as LGBTQ organizations and the stars of the films based on her books speak out against them.