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NME apologise to Morrissey over racism row

NME apologise over 2007 article which Morrissey claims portrayed him as a racist
NME apologise over 2007 article which Morrissey claims portrayed him as a racist

NME have issued a public apology to Morrissey over a 2007 feature which he argued portrayed him as a racist.

Morrissey took legal action against the magazine following the publication of the interview, titled Morrissey: Big Mouth Strikes Again.

The case has been in and out of court, but today marks the first time either side has sought to end the trial with NME issuing an apology for any perceived idea that the interview suggested Morrissey was racist.

The statement from the music magazine reads: "In December 2007, we published an article entitled 'Morrissey: Big mouth strikes again'. Following this, Morrissey began proceedings for libel against us. His complaint is that we accused him of being a racist off the back of an interview which he gave to the magazine. He believes the article was edited in such a way that made him seem reactionary.

"We wish to make clear that we do not believe that he is a racist; we didn't think we were saying he was and we apologise to Morrissey if he or anyone else misunderstood our piece in that way. We never set out to upset Morrissey and we hope we can both get back to doing what we do best."

The former Smiths frontman previously claimed that he would end his case for libel if he were to receive an apology from the magazine.

In 2008, Morrissey won an apology in court from Word magazine, after claiming that an article by journalist David Quantick directly following on from the NME feature also suggested he might be a racist.

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