Sony apologises to Manchester
The entertainment giant said in an apology, published on Friday in The Manchester Evening News, that company officials had met with church community leaders and Sony acknowledged the game had caused offence. The company said it now considered the matter closed.
"It was never our intention to offend anyone in the making of this game, and we would like to apologise unreservedly to them for causing that offence, and to all parts of the wider community who we might also have offended," Sony Computer Entertainment Europe president David A. Reeves said in the apology.
Manchester Cathedral's dean, the Very Rev. Rogers Govender said the apology fell short of what the church had requested.
"We asked Sony to withdraw the game," he said in a statement. "They have refused to do this."
"We asked Sony to make a substantial donation to community groups nominated by the cathedral. They have refused to do this," he said, referring the church's education department, which works to fight gun violence in Manchester.
Govender also urged Sony and others in the computer industry to agree not to set violent game in places of prayer and worship.
Sony declined to comment on the church's outstanding demands, but Reeves did promise that Manchester Cathedral would not be used in future Sony video games.
Reeves last month apologised in a letter sent to Manchester Cathedral to anyone who was offended by the game. The letter was then posted on the Church of England's web-site.
"We now consider the matter closed, and will not be making any further comment," the company said in a separate statement.