Clik here to view.

It made a statement last week – since when a further arrest has been made – but what else should the newspaper group reveal?
1. News International insists it is cooperating with police and trying to root out anyone who was involved in hacking, so why did it bag up evidence from the desk of James Weatherup, the executive arrested yesterday, and remove it from the building?
2. Police have now arrested three former News of the World news executives who worked under former editor Andy Coulson and a fourth, Clive Goodman, was convicted of having phones hacked. If they are all found to have been involved in hacking, is it possible that Coulson was not, as he claims, aware of the practice?
3. Why did two internal inquiries conducted by News International fail to find the evidence that has led police to arrest chief reporter Neville Thurlbeck and Weatherup?
4. If it is attempting to root out the hacking problem as it claims, why is News International still paying the legal fees of Glenn Mulcaire, the private detective who is appealing against a court order that he name the News of the World executives who commissioned him to hack phones? Are these payments in breach of clause 15 of the PCC code, which prohibits payments or offers of payments to anyone who may "reasonably be expected to be called as a witness"?
5. Until yesterday, only three current News of the World employees had been named as being directly involved in alleged hacking. Weatherup's name had not previously been linked to hacking. Now that police are sifting through hundreds of thousands of internal emails, how many more of the paper's journalists will be caught up in the scandal?
6. In July 2009 the News of the World's editor, Colin Myler, told MPs that he and the paper's top lawyer, Tom Crone, briefed James Murdoch over a proposed £700,000 payment to Gordon Taylor, of the Professional Footballers' Association, to settle a case over alleged hacking of his phone. What was Murdoch told at this meeting about evidence that at least two more NoW journalists had been involved in hacking?
7. When did James Murdoch and Rebekah Brooks first become aware that more than one NoW journalist had been involved in hacking and did they immediately correct the company's longstanding insistence that the problem was confined to a single rogue reporter?
8. When was Rupert Murdoch told that evidence existed that phone hacking at the News of the World had not been confined to a single rogue reporter?
9. When she was editor of the News of the World between 2000 and 2003, was Rebekah Brooks (then Wade) aware of the activities of Jonathan Rees, a private detective who the paper paid to buy information from police officers and obtain data by other illegal means?