Andy Coulson, formerly editor of the tabloid News of the World, and later David Cameron's director of communications, speaks on a mobile phone in London, in this file photo. - AP file photo

LONDON: Britain's top-selling Sunday tabloid vowed on Tuesday to take the “strongest possible action” if it is proven that its journalists hacked the phone of a missing teenager who was later found murdered.

British Prime Minister David Cameron earlier said police should pursue their investigation into the claims about the News of the World, owned by Rupert Murdoch's News International, in “the most vigorous way”.

News International chief Rebekah Brooks, who was editor of the paper at the time of schoolgirl Milly Dowler's disappearance in 2002, told staff that the allegations were “sickening” and “almost too horrific to believe”.

“If the allegations are proved to be true then I can promise the strongest possible action will be taken,” said Brooks.

The tabloid has been dogged by claims of phone hacking ever since its royal editor and private investigator Glenn Mulcaire were jailed for the practice in 2007, and a new investigation was launched in January amid a wave of fresh allegations.

Mulcaire, who was paid by the newspaper, issued a statement to the Guardian on Tuesday. “I want to apologise to anybody who was hurt or upset by what I have done,” he said, blaming the News of the World's “constant demand for results”.

“A lot of information I obtained was simply tittle-tattle, of no great importance to anyone, but sometimes what I did was for what I thought was the greater good, to carry out investigative journalism,” he added.

Dowler disappeared aged 13 on her way home from school near London, sparking a high-profile search. Her bones were found six months later, although it was not until last month that her killer Levi Bellfield was convicted.

According to The Guardian, private investigators and journalists listened to increasingly desperate messages on Dowler's phone left by her parents and friends as the days went by without any word from her.

When her voicemail box became full, they even deleted several messages to make room for new ones - an action that her loved ones and police mistakenly took as proof that Dowler was still alive and using her phone, the report said.

“If they are true, this is a truly dreadful act and a truly dreadful situation. What I've read in the papers is quite, quite shocking,” Cameron told a press conference during a visit to Afghanistan.

He said police “should feel they should investigate this without any fear, without any favour, without any worry about where the evidence should lead them. They should pursue this in the most vigorous way that they can”.

The prime minister was dragged further into the crisis when News International revealed late Tuesday that it had forwarded evidence to the police which alleged former editor Andy Coulson had authorized payments to police in return for information.

Coulson, who was editor between 2003 and 2007, also worked as Cameron's director of communications from 2007 to 2011, but resigned as the scandal gathered momentum, although he has always denied any wrongdoing.

Cameron earlier said he would not intervene in the government's deliberations over News Corp.'s highly controversial bid to buy the 61-per cent of BSkyB it does not already own.

“The government, on these processes, is acting in a quasi-judicial way and it is quite right that the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport (Jeremy Hunt) carries out his role in that manner without any interference from anyone else in the government,” he said.

The Telegraph on Wednesday carried fresh allegations that family members of the London 7/7 bomb victims also had their phones hacked as they were waiting to hear the fates of their relatives.

It also emerged Tuesday that the parents of the victims in another prominent murder case, schoolgirls Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman, have been contacted by detectives investigating phone hacking at the newspaper.

In the first sign of a commercial backlash from the allegations, carmaker Ford announced that it was pulling its advertising from the News of the World.

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