December 24, 2024

Top BBC Figures Acknowledge ‘Errors’ in Reporting Scandals

But, addressing a parliamentary panel, one of them, Chris Patten, the head of the supervisory BBC Trust, offered an unusually insistent defense of the former director, George Entwistle, whom he had hired, and who had been labeled hapless and bumbling by many politicians and newspaper columnists before and after his resignation on Nov. 10.

“The easiest thing to do is to join in the general trashing of a decent man and I’m not going to do that,” Lord Patten told lawmakers, describing Mr. Entwistle as “a decent man” who “doesn’t deserve to be bullied or have his character demolished.”

But Lord Patten, Britain’s last governor of Hong Kong in the 1990s and a public figure of long standing, balked at questioning by one lawmaker, Conservative Philip Davies, who pressed him to provide an itinerary of his work schedule at the BBC. “Certainly not,” he said. “I think it’s a thoroughly impertinent question.”

“What is the role of it? Do you want to know my toilet habits?”

Lord Patten and Tim Davie, the acting BBC director general, were addressing a parliamentary panel known for often aggressive interrogations in scandals at Britain’s newspapers and broadcasters. They were speaking just days before an another inquiry into the separate phone hacking scandal, mainly at Rupert Murdoch’s British newspaper outpost, is to deliver a long-awaited report that could lead to tighter regulation of the rambunctious British press.

The combination of inquiries and findings seemed to illustrate once more the intense scrutiny faced by journalists and editors in Britain at a time when the news business is struggling to make a painful and costly adjustment to the digital era. The newspaper scandal, in particular, has drawn in British politicians, including Prime Minister David Cameron, who have testified about what seems to have been a cozy relationship with Murdoch executives.

But Mr. Davie said that, while the BBC, a British national institution, was going through a “major crisis,” it was not in chaos. “This is not an organization that is falling apart internally,” he said.

Lord Patten has played a central and frequently contentious role in seeking to find a way out of the BBC’s current crisis. Mr. Davie, a former head of BBC radio operations, has been the interim head of the BBC since Mr. Entwistle resigned after only 54 days in office. Sitting side by side to face lawmakers, the two men were appearing before the panel for the first time since Mr. Entwistle’s departure.

One issue before the parliamentary select committee on culture, media and sport was a decision by Lord Patten to authorize resignation benefits to Mr. Entwistle including a payoff equivalent to a full year’s salary of $750,000, twice the contractual obligation.

Lord Patten said on Tuesday that, in negotiations with Mr. Entwistle, “we either had to deal with it quickly there and then, broadly speaking on the terms of 12 months” salary as a payoff, or go through other procedures for compensation base0d on constructive and unfair dismissal, which would have cost the corporation a further $128,000.

“What did we get in return?” Lord Patten said. “First of all, we got a settlement that was less than we would have got had we gone through constructive dismissal.” And second, he said, if any of the current inquiries finds that Mr. Entwistle “has done anything which is in breach of his contract or the BBC disciplinary guidelines, we can claw back some of the remunerations that has been paid.”

Mr. Entwistle appeared before the panel on Oct. 23 when its attention was focused on a decision a year ago by the editor of the “Newsnight” current affairs program to cancel an investigation into the sexual misconduct of Jimmy Savile, a longtime television host who died in Oct. 2011 at age 84. The BBC was also preparing Christmastime programs paying tribute to Mr. Savile.

At that time, Mr. Entwistle was in charge of television programming, while the director general was Mark Thompson, who resigned in September to become the president and chief executive of The New York Times Company. Mr. Thompson appeared on Friday before a separate closed-door inquiry in London into the cancellation of the “Newsnight” segment last year.

Since the panel’s session with Mr. Entwistle on Oct. 23, the scandal has widened after a “Newsnight” broadcast on Nov. 2 wrongfully implicated a former Conservative Party politician in sexual abuse at a children’s home in North Wales during the Thatcher era.

Events in that imbroglio forced Mr. Entwistle to resign. He appeared with Lord Patten at his side to announce his decision. “I think he found the whole thing an appalling experience, appalling,” Lord Patten said, but added: “I think his departure was in his interest and the BBC’s I’m afraid.”Lord Patten said the second “Newsnight” program showed “appalling editorial judgment. The journalism was — to be polite — shoddy.”

He added: “This was a terribly elementary journalistic failure.”

Mr. Davie said many journalists at the BBC were “aghast at the basic error that was made.”

A BBC inquiry into the second “Newsnight” episode found that journalists failed to give a right of reply to the person they implicated and did not ask his accuser to positively identify him. The report implicated but did not directly identify Alistair McAlpine, the former treasurer of the Conservative Party.

Lord McAlpine has since reached out-of-court libel settlements with the BBC for about $295,000 and with its main commercial rival, ITV, for about $200,000. Last week, the BBC announced that Tony Hall, the head of the Royal Opera House, would take over as the BBC’s director general next year.

Between now and then the British print and broadcast industries face a thicket of inquiries. The BBC has started two internal investigations. One is into the cancellation of the “Newsnight” segment, led by Nick Pollard, a former head of the rival Sky News, and the other is into the culture and practices of the BBC over decades.

The parliamentary panel is also likely to call further witnesses while, on Thursday, much attention in Britain will be focused on the publication of the report by Lord Justice Sir Brian Leveson, who has conducted lengthy inquiries into the phone hacking scandal, with witnesses including Mr. Murdoch and his son James testifying publicly and under oath.

Apart from those inquiries, Scotland Yard is conducting three police investigations into phone hacking, computer hacking and the corruption of public officials. Scores of journalists, lawyers, executives and others have been arrested and questioned.

John F. Burns reported from London and Alan Cowell from Paris.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/28/world/europe/panel-to-question-top-bbc-figures-about-abuse-scandals.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

BBC Chairman Says Network Needs Radical Overhaul

“Does the BBC need a thorough structural overhaul? Of course it does,” the chairman of the BBC Trust, Chris Patten, said on “The Andrew Marr Show,” the BBC’s flagship Sunday morning talk show, after the resignation of the broadcaster’s chief executive.

But although Mr. Patten has said that the BBC’s handling of the scandal was marked by “unacceptably shoddy journalism,” he pushed back on the Marr show against suggestions that the crisis could lead to a dismantling of the BBC as it now exists, with 23,000 employees, a $6 billion annual budget and a dominant role in British broadcasting.

Mr. Patten, 68, a former Conservative cabinet minister who gained a reputation for feisty independence when he was Britain’s last colonial governor in Hong Kong, said critics of the BBC should not lose sight of its reputation at home and abroad for trustworthy journalism.

“The BBC is and has been hugely respected around the world,” he said. “But we have to earn that. If the BBC loses that, then it is over.”

Public confidence in the broadcaster has slumped further in opinion polls in the wake of its coverage of a scandal involving allegations of abuses by a senior politician at a children’s home in Wales in the 1970s and ’80s. But the British public would not support breaking up the BBC, Mr. Patten said, adding, “The BBC is one of the things that has come to define and reflect Britishness, and we shouldn’t lose that.”

Barely 12 hours earlier, Mr. Patten stood outside the BBC’s new billion-dollar London headquarters with George Entwistle, the departing director general, as Mr. Entwistle announced his resignation, after only eight weeks in the post, to atone for his failings in dealing with what he called “the exceptional events of the past few weeks.”

Mr. Entwistle’s resignation was prompted by outrage over a Nov. 2 report on “Newsnight,” a current affairs program, that wrongly implicated a former Conservative Party politician in the scandal. Responding to reports that the “Newsnight” segment was broadcast without some basic fact-checking that would have exculpated the 70-year-old retired politician it implicated, Alistair McAlpine, Mr. Entwistle said it reflected “unacceptable journalistic standards” and never should have been broadcast.

That episode, which Mr. McAlpine’s lawyers have said would be the subject of a defamation lawsuit, compounded the problems facing the network since revelations last month about a longtime BBC television host, Jimmy Savile, who died at 84 in 2011. Mr. Savile was suspected of having sexually abused as many as 300 young people over decades in the BBC’s studios and in children’s homes and hospitals where he gained ready access as a campaigner for children’s charities.

The BBC has been accused of covering up the Savile matter by canceling a “Newsnight” report on the accusations against him last December and going ahead with several Christmas specials that paid tribute to Mr. Savile.

The producer of “Newsnight” told his staff members that the Savile investigation was not adequately substantiated by their reporting, but at least one “Newsnight” staff member noted that the producer said that he had come under pressure on the issue from BBC managers. At that time, Mr. Entwistle was in charge of all the BBC’s television productions and was seeking to succeed Mark Thompson, who stepped down in September after eight years as director general. Mr. Entwistle has said that he was not informed beforehand of the nature of the “Newsnight” investigation or the reasons for its cancellation.

On Monday, Mr. Thompson will begin his new post as president and chief executive of The New York Times Company. He has said he knew nothing beforehand about the “Newsnight” investigation of Mr. Savile or the decision to scrap it — not even that it involved allegations of pedophilia — and that he had never met Mr. Savile. But Mr. Thompson has said that he is willing to answer any questions put to him by a parliamentary inquiry or a raft of other investigations now under way.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/12/world/europe/bbc-shaken-by-bungled-report-needs-radical-overhaul-its-chairman-says.html?partner=rss&emc=rss