A record number of complaints were resolved by the Press Complaints Commission last year.

The PCC's annual report said 2944 complaints were made in 1997 - seven out of 10 relating to accuracy - and nine out of ten involving a breach of its Code of Practice were settled. The PCC said this underlined that self-regulation was the best way to handle complaints. Lord Wakeham, chairman, said 1997 was a year of ''evolution'' for press regulation following the death of Diana, Princess of Wales, an event which ''clearly hit a raw nerve among members of the public in the way in which newspapers and magazines gather news''.