Category: BBC

  • Nairobi July 8, 2021— In light of Burundi’s decision to lift bans on the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) and pro-government news site Ikiriho, the Committee to Protect Journalists called on the country to reinstate all banned media outlets. CPJ also expressed alarm at the conditions the U.S. Congress-funded Voice of America (VOA) said were placed on it by authorities for its reinstatement in the country.

    On June 16, Burundi’s media regulator, the National Communication Council (CNC), said the BBC, banned since May 2018, could reapply for a license to operate in the country, according to the BBC, the regulator’s statement, which CPJ reviewed, and news reports. The CNC also announced the lifting of a 2018 ban of Ikiriho, according to tweets by the media outlet; reports from 2018 said Ikiriho was banned amid a defamation probe.

    Several other outlets are still unable to operate in Burundi, including VOA, which has been suspended since 2018 for allegedly airing content that lacked balance and which was prejudicial to Burundi’s relations with the United Nations, CPJ documented at the time. In a June 23 email, VOA told CPJ that authorities had conditioned the lifting of the ban on the “handing over a VOA Swahili journalist the Burundi authorities want to arrest,” something that the outlet “will not negotiate.” The VOA spokesperson did not name the journalist.

    In statements sent via messaging application, CNC Vice President Laurent Kaganda told CPJ that the regulator had not demanded an arrest but that the VOA ban would only be lifted “once the question of the journalist in conflict with Burundian law is resolved.”

    “Despite tentative gestures toward allowing more news media to work, the outrageous demand that a journalist be surrendered to authorities before the VOA’s suspension can be lifted and the continued silencing of other outlets show that Burundi remains a fundamentally hostile environment for the press,” said CPJ’s Sub-Saharan African representative, Muthoki Mumo. “Authorities should expedite the restoration of the BBC’s license; lift the VOA suspension without condition; remove all restrictions on other media outlets; and guarantee that journalists can operate freely.”

    In 2019 the CNC indefinitely renewed its suspension of VOA, citing the station’s employment of Patrick Nduwimana, an exiled Burundian journalist whom authorities said was sought by law enforcement, as CPJ documented. At the time, VOA told CPJ that Nduwimana was working in its Kiswahili service. Kaganda confirmed to CPJ that Nduwimana is the VOA journalist in question.

    In February this year, Burundi’s Supreme Court made public a June 2020 conviction of seven exiled journalists including Nduwimana, who were tried in absentia and without legal representation, for alleged complicity in a 2015 attempted coup, according to a copy of the court’s announcement reviewed by CPJ. In comments published in a VOA report on July 2, Nduwimana termed allegations that he was involved in violence in the 2015 coup as “false and baseless.”

    The BBC was suspended from operating in Burundi in May 2018, after the regulator accused it of broadcasting “exaggerated, non-verified, defamatory” comments about then-President Pierre Nkurunziza, as CPJ documented at the time (Nkurunziza died in 2020). In 2019, the CNC withdrew the BBC’s license after the outlet aired a documentary on alleged torture, which officials said was false and slanderous, as CPJ documented.

    In an email to CPJ, a BBC spokesperson welcomed the CNC’s statement to allow the station to seek a new license and said that the broadcaster “look[s] forward to working out what the next steps are” in negotiations. In his June 28 messages to CPJ, Kaganda said that the CNC was still waiting for the BBC to submit a request for a new license, and that the regulator would respond to such a request in a day, followed by discussions about “the rights and obligations of the BBC and CNC” before the broadcaster can reopen in the country. Reached via messaging app, Ikiriho director Philippe Ngendakumana declined to speak to CPJ.

    Among the other outlets banned in Burundi are the privately owned Radio Publique Africaine, director Bob Rugurika told CPJ via messaging app, and the privately owned Renaissance Radio and Television, director Innocent Muhozi told CPJ via messaging app. They said that both stations, now operating from exile, have been unable to operate in Burundi since 2015. Rugurika and Muhozi are also among the seven exiled journalists convicted in absentia for alleged involvement in the 2015 attempted coup.

    When asked about the status of these two stations, Kaganda claimed the outlets had failed to respond to a February 2021 invitation to a meeting between the CNC and banned media, to discuss reopening. Rugurika and Muhozi told CPJ that their stations had not received any communication from the Burundian authorities.

    In February, the CNC promised to lift a 2017 block on the website of the independent media group Iwacu, according to a report by the news outlet. Even though Kaganda claimed that the website has been unblocked in Burundi, a June 22 report by Uganda-based digital rights group the Collaboration on International ICT Policy in East and Southern Africa (CIPESA) said the site remained inaccessible in the country. Speaking via Messaging application, Iwacu’s founder, Antoine Kaburahe, told CPJ that as of July 6 the news site is only accessible via the use of virtual private networks (VPN) or a mirror website.

    Last year CPJ wrote to Burundi’s president, Évariste Ndayishimiye, weeks after he took office in June 2020, calling on him to break with the country’s history of media repression, including by lifting media bans and discontinuing criminal cases against journalists. Four Iwacu journalists were pardoned and freed in December after more than a year of imprisonment, according to media reports. However, on June 21, CPJ and 11 organizations noted that “the media environment in Burundi remains severely restricted,” in a joint letter urging the European Union to prioritize human rights in ongoing diplomatic negotiations with Burundi. 

    Reached via telephone on June 24, presidential spokesperson Willy Nyamitwe asked that CPJ call back in 10 minutes. He did not answer subsequent calls from CPJ on June 24 and June 25, and has not responded to questions sent via text message, an email from CPJ, or to a message submitted through his personal website.


    This content originally appeared on Committee to Protect Journalists and was authored by Committee to Protect Journalists.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • The BBC has published its own research into chronically ill and disabled people’s experience of the coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic. One campaigner called the findings “horrendous”. But the BBC inadvertently pointed to the biggest problem of all: that the government, much of the media, and society at large have ignored the experiences of disabled people throughout the pandemic.

    New research

    As Ruth Clegg wrote for the BBC:

    Thousands of deaf and disabled people across the UK have told the BBC of the devastating impact the pandemic has had on their lives.

    The BBC spoke to more than 3,300 chronically ill, deaf, and disabled people. It found that:

    • 2,604 said their mental health had “got worse”.
    • 2,427 said their conditions or impairments “had deteriorated”.
    • 683 said medical professionals had cancelled “all” of their appointments, or they were unable to attend them.
    • 241 said they “had not left house at all”.
    Josselin’s story

    It told one disabled person’s story:

    Fourteen-year-old Josselin has a rare genetic condition, which means she has hearing loss, a vision impairment, can’t walk or talk and is fed through a tube.

    Her family, who live in Wiltshire, have a vital network of services they rely on to keep her well – physiotherapy, speech and language therapy, occupational therapy, respite care. All of that stopped in March 2020.

    Josselin’s mum said that her daughter “struggled”, for example pulling her hair out. The BBC noted that:

    Josselin was prescribed anti-depressants and anti-psychotic medication. She was also given prescription drugs like diazepam to cope with the pain she was having in her hips and her spine because of a lack of physiotherapy.

    Her mum said:

    Suddenly she was put on all these new medications. There was just no support for us at all – it was horrendous.

    And that:

    It feels like it’s because she’s disabled so it’s not worth bothering with… She’s not ever going to walk and talk so they just don’t bother with her.

    But what was interesting about the BBC research is how Clegg framed it.

    The “hidden fallout”?

    She wrote that:

    The findings paint, for the first time, a comprehensive picture of a hidden fallout of Covid-19.

    The charity Scope said that disabled people’s needs “had been forgotten”. But campaigns lead for the group Transport for All Katie Pennick disagreed. She said on Twitter that:

    it wasn’t a “hidden fallout”. The impact of COVID has been well documented by disabled people.

    She went on to list in a thread the disabled people-led research into the effect of the pandemic that had been published. These reports were barely mentioned in the corporate media, if at all. In July, The Canary wrote about one such report. We reported at the time:

    A massive 76% of the people surveyed were dissatisfied with the help that the government offered, while a third of people believed that the government “is neglecting disabled people”.

    Disabled people: ignored

    But sadly, this was all predictable. As The Canary wrote in March 2020, disabled people’s organisations were already warning about the dangers of the pandemic and the government’s response to it. Now, the BBC research shows that those fears were realised. And as one Twitter user said:

    BBC research documenting experiences after the event is too little too late for countless chronically ill, sick, and disabled people. Many were warning about the situation. Others predicted what would happen. Sadly, the government along with much of the media failed to listen.

    Featured image via BBC News – screengrab 

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on The Canary.

  • A BBC presenter just shut down a Labour MP. The reason? The politician had said that Boris Johnson “just lies”. Clearly facts are not allowed on the Beeb anymore.

    The BBC: don’t mention the truth

    BBC Politics East was discussing Matt Hancock’s resignation. Host Stewart White was speaking with Labour MP Daniel Zeichner and Tory MP Peter Bone. Specifically, the issue of social care came up. Zeichner said of Hancock’s role as health secretary:

    There’s also, of course, the question of the huge failure on failing to integrate health and social care. If you remember, the Prime Minister told us two years ago he had a plan. But it got lost somewhere, didn’t it? Another lie.

    White interrupted him, saying:

    Hang on. Let me just stop you there. We have had a Covid Pandemic. Surely that had to take first place.

    Zeichner was having none of it. He sprung back:

    He said he had a plan in his pocket. All he had to do was pull it out of the pocket. We know he didn’t have. He just lies. That’s the prime minister we’ve got. That’s the problem.

    This was too much for White (and probably the show’s producer, screaming in his ear). He rebuffed Zeichner, saying:

    First of all, I can’t let you say that the Prime Minister has lied.

    A viral video

    Campaigning lawyer Peter Stefanovic had something to say about this. He tweeted that:

    His video about Johnson’s lies to parliament has had over 24 millions views on Twitter alone. As Bywire News reported, the video:

    has also been the inspiration behind a Parliamentary campaign – led by Green Party MP Caroline Lucas and supported by leading MPs from six of the seven opposition parties (Keir Starmer’s spokesperson said Labour wouldn’t support it because they don’t normally work with other parties) – calling on the Speaker of the House to grant an inquiry into the Prime Minister’s diabolically strained relationship with the truth.

    Blatant fact: Johnson is a liar

    It laid out Johnson’s untruths. These included:

    Claim 5: On the 17th of June 2020, during PMQs [Prime Minister’s Questions], the Prime Minister said “There are hundreds of thousands, I think 400,000, fewer families living in poverty now than there were in 2010”.

    The Truth: Johnson’s statement is entirely wrong. Both the Children’s Commissioner and the Office for Statistics Regulation have confirmed that the PM’s claim was not borne out of the actual figures, and was therefore not true.

    Yet so far, the BBC has not reported on this issue. And now, its presenters seem to be actively shutting down any mention of what is blatant fact: Johnson has repeatedly lied to parliament. Sadly it seems all in a day’s work for our alleged public service broadcaster.

    Featured image via BBC iPlayer – screengrab and Channel 4 News – YouTube

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on The Canary.

  • Nairobi, June 4, 2021 — Ugandan police should immediately drop their criminal investigation into the Daily Monitor newspaper and guarantee that the media can cover security forces’ alleged misconduct without retaliation, the Committee to Protect Journalists said today.

    On May 31, the police Criminal Investigations Department summoned Tony Glencross, the managing director of the Daily Monitor’s parent company, Nation Media Group-Uganda, and Tabu Butagira, the group’s managing editor, to record statements as part of a police investigation into allegations of criminal libel, incitement to violence, and false news publication, according to reports by the newspaper and the BBC.

    The investigation focuses on a May 31 report by the newspaper detailing the findings of a BBC documentary investigation into the deaths of civilians during election-related protests in November 2020, which the Daily Monitor said vindicated its reporting from early 2021, according to those sources. The BBC report included videos allegedly showing security personnel indiscriminately shooting and killing civilians.

    Neither journalist attended the questioning, scheduled for June 2, because Glencross was in COVID-19 quarantine and Butagira was on a field assignment, according to the Daily Monitor’s report. Glencross told the Daily Monitor that they would “obviously comply” with the police summons. Butagira told CPJ via messaging app that they planned to respond to the summons at a later date.

    “Instead of thoroughly investigating allegations that security forces killed civilians during protests last year, Ugandan police are targeting the messenger by summoning journalists who have covered such allegations,” said CPJ’s sub-Saharan Africa representative, Muthoki Mumo. “Authorities should drop their investigation into the Daily Monitor, which is a transparent attempt to intimidate the paper.”

    In a 2000 ruling, Uganda’s Constitutional Court struck the penal code’s false news law; CPJ could not immediately determine how police intended to pursue an investigation under that annulled law. Butagira told CPJ that it was “strange” that police were relying on a “non-existent law” in their case.

    Convictions for criminal libel are punishable by up to two years in prison, and incitement convictions can carry jail terms of up to three years, according to the Ugandan penal code.

    Police spokesperson Fred Enanga asked CPJ to direct queries to the office of the Inspector General of Police. CPJ tried to reach Inspector General Martins Okoth-Ochola by calling the police headquarters in Kampala; an officer who answered referred CPJ to Ochola’s assistant, Fred Mirondo.

    When contacted by CPJ, Mirondo asked that questions be sent over email. In a phone call today, Mirondo acknowledged receipt of that email but referred CPJ to the head of the Criminal Investigations Department, Grace Akullo, for comment.

    CPJ repeatedly called Akullo and texted her for comment, but she did not respond.

    Separately, Charles Twiine, the spokesperson of the Criminal Investigations Department, told CPJ via messaging application that “being a journalist does not give a ticket to immunity” but did not provide specific comment on the summonses and investigations into the Daily Monitor‘s work. 


    This content originally appeared on Committee to Protect Journalists and was authored by Committee to Protect Journalists.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Abuja, May 30, 2021 – Nigerian authorities should conduct a swift and thorough investigation into the death threats received by journalist Peter Nkanga and ensure his safety, the Committee to Protect Journalist said today.

    Since May 20, dozens of anonymous people have called and sent text messages to Nkanga, an Abuja-based reporter with the BBC, angered over a recent documentary aired by the broadcaster, according to the journalist, who spoke to CPJ in a phone interview and shared copies of the threats.

    Nkanga told CPJ that he had gone into hiding for fear of his safety.

    “Nigerian authorities must promptly and thoroughly investigate the threats made to BBC journalist Peter Nkanga and ensure his safety,” said Angela Quintal, CPJ’s Africa program coordinator, in New York. “Death threats and systematic harassment can be a form of censorship, and authorities must take any attempts at intimidation seriously.”

    On May 17, the BBC aired a documentary anchored by Nkanga that featured Ahmed Isah, the host of the Brekete Family Program, a popular Nigerian radio show in which he advocates on behalf of people facing human rights issues. In the documentary, Isah is seen slapping a woman who allegedly set her niece’s hair on fire, which Nkanga says “crossed a line.” Elsewhere in the documentary, Nkanga also refers to Isah as “effective” in seeking justice for Nigerians who faced abuse.

    On May 19, Isah apologized on-air during the Brekete Family Program for hitting that woman, but accused Nkanga and the BBC team of plotting to kill him, saying, “they had planned a specific spot where they would stage what looked like an attack on our vehicle and there they would eliminate me.”

    The BBC denied those allegations in a statement published by the local daily Premium Times

    On May 20, during a call-in segment on the Brekete Family Program, someone who identified themselves as “Barrister Tinubu” called the program, said Nkanga’s phone number on-air, and called for Isah’s supporters to contact Nkanga to voice their displeasure over the documentary.

    Nkanga told CPJ that he almost immediately began receiving threatening messages and calls and he was forced to switch off his phone. One of the threats, a recording of which CPJ reviewed, came from an unidentified caller who said Nkanga would be “stoned to death” if he continued covering Isah and Human Rights Radio.

    On May 21, the same person identifying themselves as Barrister Tinubu called the show again, shared another of Nkanga’s phone numbers, and again criticized the journalist’s work. A May 22 tweet tagging Nkanga and BBC Africa included an image of a bleeding snake wrapped around a saw and a message that those picking fights need to “Be careful.”

    On May 20, Nigeria’s broadcast media regulator, the National Broadcasting Corporation, summoned Isah and a co-host of the Brekete Family Program over the assault featured in the documentary, according to Premium Times.

    Nkanga told CPJ that he was particularly worried about what Isah’s supporters would do to him or his family if Nigeria’s media regulator punished Isah as a result of his reporting.

    The National Broadcasting Corporation said on May 27 that it had suspended Human Rights Radio, the Brekete Family Program’s parent company, over Isah’s actions depicted in the BBC documentary, according to Premium Times. The suspension will begin on May 31 and last for at least 30 days, according to that report, which also said that the broadcaster would be required to pay an unspecified fine.

    When CPJ called Isah for comment, a person who confirmed that he was Isa hung up as soon as CPJ’s representative identified themself. When CPJ called back, the person answered but then hung up immediately. CPJ called and emailed Brekete Family Program for comment, but the calls did not connect and the email received an error message.

    CPJ called and texted National Broadcasting Corporation Spokesperson Franca Aiyetan and police spokesperson Maryam Yusuf, but did not receive any responses.

    Nkanga previously worked as CPJ’s West Africa Representative from 2012 to 2017.


    This content originally appeared on Committee to Protect Journalists and was authored by Committee to Protect Journalists.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Two BBC whistleblowers who tried to highlight the deceitful methods employed by Martin Bashir to obtain his explosive interview with princess of Wales Diana Spencer have attacked the corporation’s “generic” apology.

    “Duress”

    Graphic designer Matt Wiessler, who was commissioned by Bashir to create mocked-up documents, has long claimed he was made the scapegoat for the scandal. The report by lord Dyson was published on 20 May. It found Bashir “deceived” Diana into agreeing to the interview.

    The journalist commissioned falsified documents purporting to show payments into the bank account of Alan Waller, a former employee of her brother the earl Charles Spencer; Patrick Jephson, Diana’s private secretary; and Richard Aylard, private secretary to the prince of Wales, the report found.

    The documents falsely suggested the individuals were being paid for keeping the princess under surveillance.

    Wiessler said on 21 May that his business had folded as a result of being blacklisted by the BBC after blowing the whistle on Bashir’s tactics.

    He told the Today programme:

    Only under duress do we get some sort of apology and some sort of acknowledgement.

    Wiessler said all he had received was a “well-crafted letter” from the BBC at 10pm on 20 May which did “the absolute minimum” to acknowledge how poorly he had been treated.

    He added:

    It’s just really weak, calculating and, quite honestly, after 25 years, it’s nasty what they are doing to this day.

    Lord Dyson – Bashir report
    Martin Bashir has said he is still proud of the interview (BBC/PA)

    “Dishonest”

    Wiessler accused Bashir of “arrogance” for saying recently he is still proud of the Diana interview. Former Panorama producer Mark Killick, who was sacked from the programme within 24 hours when he raised concerns, called Bashir a “dishonest reporter” who “lied and lied”.

    Speaking to BBC Breakfast, he said:

    I think (the report) makes it very clear that Martin Bashir was a dishonest reporter, that he not only forged a number of documents, but he lied and lied.

    Killick said senior managers at the BBC had fostered a “culture of fear” to deter whistleblowers and orchestrated a smear campaign against its own employees. He said:

    I was told we only want the loyal people on the programme – I had been on Panorama for 10 years – and I was effectively let go. That is what happened to whistleblowers at that time.

    Lord Dyson – Bashir report
    Former Panorama producer Mark Killick lost his job within 24 hours of raising concerns (Media Zoo/PA)

    “Generic”

    Killick criticised the BBC for its inadequate and “generic” apology to both whistleblowers and Diana’s sons. He said:

    Many people, both on the Princess Diana side of the line and in the BBC, had their reputations destroyed by a smear campaign authorised by BBC senior management, and many of them lost their jobs.

    I’m not quite sure that a generic apology in the form of a press statement by the BBC is anything like adequate.

    He continued:

    The culture of fear that was established then, it was a long time ago, but they sent a clear message to everyone in the BBC, ‘do not refer up, do not bring the BBC bad news’.

    Dyson’s report said:

    By showing Earl Spencer the fake Waller and Jephson/Aylard statements and informing him of their contents, Mr Bashir deceived and induced him to arrange a meeting with Princess Diana. By gaining access to Princess Diana in this way, Mr Bashir was able to persuade her to agree to give the interview.

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on The Canary.

  • The BBC’s coverage of the death of the duke of Edinburgh has drawn 110,000 complaints, the highest number ever published in the UK about television programming.

    Philip Windsor died at Windsor Castle on 9 April at the age of 99, prompting the corporation to clear its schedules across both BBC One and BBC Two to run a series of mirrored special programmes.

    The coverage also took over the news channel and BBC radio stations.

    Journalist Martine Croxall announced the news on the BBC (BBC/PA)

    According to the BBC’s fortnightly complaints bulletin, some 104,010 people complained about the coverage within the first three days.

    At time of publication on 15 April, the overall total was 109,741.

    Public broadcasting?

    The BBC said in a statement:

    The passing of HRH The Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh was a significant event which generated a lot of interest both nationally and internationally.

    We acknowledge some viewers were unhappy with the level of coverage given and impact this had on the billed TV and radio schedules.

    We do not make such changes without careful consideration and the decisions made reflect the role the BBC plays as the national broadcaster during moments of national significance.

    We are grateful for all feedback and we always listen to the response from our audiences.

    The number is believed to be a record for complaints in British television history. Some 63,000 people complained about the BBC’s screening of Jerry Springer: The Musical in 2005.

    After the duke’s death on 9 April, viewers tuning into BBC Four were greeted with a message urging them to switch over for a “major news report” while BBC Radio 4 and BBC Radio 5 Live also aired programmes about the duke.

    The rolling news coverage meant the final of MasterChef was postponed and EastEnders was also delayed.

    The broadcaster set up a dedicated webpage for viewers to lodge their dissatisfaction at its coverage after it cleared its schedules to cover Windsor’s death.

    More things to complain about

    The BBC also received complaints from viewers about the inclusion of prince Andrew in its coverage despite his association with the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. One of Epstein’s alleged victims says that she was forced to have sex with Andrew while under the age of consent. Andrew was pictured with his arm around the woman in question.

    Andrew stepped down from royal duties over the scandal in 2019. Since then, American authorities have accused Andrew of not cooperating with their investigations into Epstein.

    The BBC defended his inclusion:

    All of Prince Philip’s children gave a tribute to their father following his passing, which we have covered in our news programming.

    “We have fully reported on the allegations against Prince Andrew and we have also made it clear that he has not been charged with any crime. We consider we have appropriately covered his comments.

    In March, Piers Morgan’s comments on Good Morning Britain about the Meghan Markle’s interview with Oprah Winfrey drew a record number of complaints for TV regulator Ofcom.

    Episodes of the ITV breakfast show on 8 and 9 March sparked more than 57,000 complaints.

    It later emerged that Markle had made a formal complaint to the watchdog about the TV host after he dismissed her account of suffering suicidal thoughts and experiencing racism at the hands of the royal family.

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on The Canary.

  • Laura Kuennsbjork has a new single out… sort of.

    Twitter jokers TheIainDuncanSmiths have come up with a new rendition of Icelandic pop star Bjork’s 1995 classic It’s Oh So Quiet featuring BBC political editor Laura Kuenssberg skipping over some newsworthy topics.

    The video sees Kuennsbjork take a wander through town, while she ignores serious news in favour of panning lefties and sucking up to the Tory government:

    Kuenssberg is, in the opinion of some, rather more generous with those in power than she is with the political left:

    TheIainDuncanSmiths are a satirical outfit whose past hits include Message in a Throttle, dedicated to courageous Bristol constabulary, and the epic Corbzy, a cover of grime artist Stormzy’s timeless sarf Larndarn banger Shut Up.

    In the past, Kuennsberg has incorrectly claimed that a Labour activist hit a Tory staffer, been accused of defending controversial Tory advisor Dominic Cummings, and been accused of lying about changes in government coronavirus policy.

    Featured image via TheIainDuncanSmiths

    By Joe Glenton

    This post was originally published on The Canary.

  • A Tory minister’s assertion about the current state of the “union” was a low moment. This was even by the Andrew Marr Show‘s usual standards. Because he managed to insult the intelligence of every person living in Scotland.

    Dowden slips on Marr

    The ‘united’ bit of the United Kingdom has been hitting the headlines again. Former Scottish first minister Alex Salmond has started his own pro-independence party. In Wales, Plaid Cymru has been pushing Welsh independence. And in recent months in the north of Ireland, polls have shown a majority support for a vote on reunification. So, enter culture secretary Oliver Dowden on Marr to lay waste to the idea of national self-determination.

    The host put it to him that Welsh first minister Mark Drakeford said:

    the Union is… under greater threat than at any time in his life. Do you agree with that?

    Dowden said:

    I think we have a very, very serious choice. The Scottish people have a very serious choice at the elections coming up in May.

    Sorry, what?

    Either Dowden doesn’t realise that Drakeford is a Welsh politician, or he thinks that only Scottish independence is an issue. But it certainly isn’t just in Scotland where self-determination is looking more likely. Because a recent ITV poll found 40% of Welsh people supported their nation’s independence.

    Either way, Dowden continued on Marr with his union clusterfucking.

    Was there a Scottish Indyref?

    He then said about the “choice” in May’s elections:

    do we get on with the job… of defeating Covid… Or do we get caught up in yet more constitutional wrangling, when we thought we’d addressed this four or five year ago, back in… in fact it’s more than that now isn’t it, seven years ago when we had the referendum

    Good to see that Scottish politics is so emblazoned on Dowden’s mind that he knows when the first Indyref was. It’s actually around six and a half years since it happened.

    Dowden’s confusion also applied to the broader situation in Scotland.

    Nothing has changed

    He continued his drivel on Marr by saying:

    Things haven’t changed since then.

    Yeah, many people would disagree with that:

    So, what does Dowden think has changed since 2014? He told Marr:

    Covid. And it’s important that we get on with dealing with that.

    My precious

    Marr asked him again if he thought the union was under threat. Dowden gave a flicker of Tory reality with his answer:

    I think there is a real risk here. And the way to deal with that risk is to make sure that you vote for the Conservative Party and unionist parties that are committed to ensuring that our precious union… should be preserved

    ‘My precious’ sums up the Tories’ attitude to the union. That is, they think Scotland, Wales, and the north of Ireland belong exclusively to them – and no one else should be in control. But when Dowden can’t even get his basic facts right on the situation north of the border, live on Marr, it actually reveals the Tories’ contempt for the other nations.

    Featured image via BBC iPlayer and pauldoyle70 – pixabay

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on The Canary.

  • Samuel Johnson famously said: “patriotism is the the last refuge of a scandalous government”. Conversely, the ridiculing of patriotism is an essential ingredient of a free society.

    But that freedom is constantly tested. On Thursday 18 March, BBC Breakfast presenter Charlie Stayt interviewed UK government minister Robert Jenrick. Behind Jenrick was a large Union Jack flag, and on his wall hung a photo of the Queen. At the conclusion of the interview, Stayt – known for his dry and often sarcastic wit – quipped to Jenrick:

    Robert Jenrick, thank you, I think your flag is not up to standard size for government interview measurements. I think it’s just a little bit small, but that’s your department really.

    In the background co-presenter Naga Munchetty could be heard laughing. And Jenrick smiled.

    Fallout

    Munchetty liked a number of tweets in response to the incident on Twitter. However, those likes may have gone against BBC social media guidance, and so she undid them:

    And BBC News tweeted:

    Munchetty has gotten in hot water before with her employer, when in July 2019 she commented on US president Donald Trump’s racism:

    Responses

    With regard to Munchetty’s latest ‘transgression’, this could be summed up as follows: white man makes sarcastic remark, woman of colour laughs and likes tweets, but it’s her who’s made to apologise.

    Unsurprisingly, there were a number of responses to what happened on social media:

    One man told Munchetty she has nothing to apologise for and that he finds the “adoration” of the flag sinister:

    And some found it impossible to hold back the humour when it comes to flags:

    Meanwhile, Evolve turned the tables and accused Jenrick of being unpatriotic by “unlawfully” helping Tory donor and former Daily Express owner Richard Desmond of avoiding £40m in taxes:

    Writer, comic and musician Mike Harding reminded us that:

    Indeed, according to British historian Stuart Laycock, there are just 22 countries that Britain hasn’t invaded. ‘World beating’, in Boris Johnson’s parlance.

    Or maybe the furore over the size of the flag helps to distract from the £2.6m makeover of a Downing Street press room:

     

    Distraction

    According to HuffPost, Labour leader Keir Starmer has a penchant for the Union Jack too, following:

    a leaked strategy presentation that suggested the party should “use the flag, veterans and dressing smartly” to win back disaffected voters.

    In other words, the use of flags, by whatever party, is about gaining or retaining power. And with that power comes not just responsibility but, invariably, abuse and corruption. The gaudy displaying of flags distracts from the latest political scandal.

    For example:

    Or there’s Britain’s world-beating response to the pandemic. According to one set of figures, the number of coronavirus (Covid-19) deaths to date in the UK is 126,122. Compare this to China, which even with its vastly bigger population of 1.4 billion has had only 4,636 coronavirus deaths. That speaks volumes.

    Labour MP Jon Tricket provides another thought-provoking perspective, focusing on shocking unemployment figures, poverty levels, cut-backs and austerity, while the rich financially benefit from the pandemic:

    More examples

    There are also many examples of Tory cronyism, particularly with regard to personal protective equipment (PPE) contracts.

    And then there’s the erosion of workers’ rights post-Brexit:

    Or the loss of millions of pounds in shares trading in the first days after the end of the Brexit transition. No doubt these losses will trickle down to the poorest in society:

    Or, post-Brexit, there’s the ending of free movement – unless you’re rich and powerful:

    Lies and damned lies

    Then there are the endless lies by politicians – particularly by Johnson. Here are a few examples:

    There are many, many more lies – all attributable to the pathological liar who somehow continues to govern the UK.

    Mindset

    In January 2021, it was reported that Richard Sharp, a former Goldman Sachs banker who donated an estimated £416k to the Conservative Party, was to be chair of the BBC’s board of directors. Sharp happens to be the former boss of UK chancellor Rishi Sunak. He was also an economic adviser to Johnson during Johnson’s time as mayor of London. Sharp joins Conservative supporter Tim Davie, who took over as BBC director general last September.

    So when the BBC is run by two Conservative Party supporters, perhaps it’s no coincidence that Munchetty was forced to apologise for liking some tweets. Although this may provide some insight into the mindset of the BBC under its new command. It doesn’t bode well. And the nature of this mindset is of particular cause for concern when we have a government characterised by lies, cronyism, and sheer corruption.

    Featured image via YouTube

    By Tom Coburg

    This post was originally published on The Canary.

  • Victoria Derbyshire demonstrated why she’s one of the best journalists around as she refused to let the head of the Society of Editors dodge questions on press racism.

    In an exchange on BBC News, Derbyshire asked Ian Murray:

    You told me the British tabloid press was not bigoted. I’ve just given you some examples. You’re denying that those examples are racist, and I’m asking ‘why are you denying that?’

    Murray then said “someone might make one comment about something” that he refused to call racist, after talking over Derbyshire throughout the interview. Derbyshire subsequently said:

    But you’ve just told me the British press isn’t racist, and now you’re saying if you keep on looking you will find a racist needle in the haystack. So let me ask you again, are those headlines racist? Simple yes or no.

    The interview prompted immediate praise for Derbyshire:

    Tabloid racism

    The British press has come under scrutiny for continual negative coverage of Markle that’s been called racist by many.

    In a much-anticipated interview with Oprah Winfrey, prince Harry said tabloid racism was one of the main reasons the couple decided to leave the UK.

    Frequent articles since their engagement have said things like Meghan has “exotic DNA“, or asked if Harry was marrying into “gangster royalty“.

    Derbyshire’s show

    Derbyshire used to have her own current affairs show broadcast on BBC Two. Victoria Derbyshire was highly praised, covering important stories such as learning disabilities, LGBTQI+ news, and domestic violence. It was cancelled in January 2020 to save money, with its last broadcast in March 2020.

    This interview only highlights how Derbyshire is a journalist who’s not afraid to hold her interviewees to account, and makes the loss of her show even sadder.

    Featured image via YouTube/BBC

    By Jasmine Norden

    This post was originally published on The Canary.

  • There’s a saying in show business that you can spend 20 years becoming an overnight star. In politics, the same is true in reverse, as the sad case of Mary Robinson and Princess Latifa of Dubai shows. Mary Robinson as former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights and a widely-honored human rights defender [with 9 awards to her name, see: https://www.trueheroesfilms.org/thedigest/laureates/4E44A265-DF1A-45E2-8C6A-3294577EA211] was a much admired personality. For that reason I was reluctant to highlight her role in the sad case back in December 2018, although many human rights NGOs (including AI and HRW) did criticise her.

    The former UN human rights Commissioner has been criticised for describing the daughter of Dubai’s ruler as “troubled” after she was reportedly forcibly returned to the kingdom after fleeing months earlier. Mary Robinson met with Sheikha Latifa on 15 December and photos released showed the two women smiling together in what appears to be a home. Ms Robinson, the former president of Ireland, told BBC’s Radio 4 the princess was a “vulnerable” woman with a “serious medical situation” for which she was receiving psychiatric care.

    Immediately the highly publicised and bizarre meeting in December was panned by rights groups for being stage-managed by the Emirati ruling family (Ms Robinson is a personal friend of Sheikha Haya, a wife of the Dubai ruler.) Defending her comments, Ms Robinson released a statement saying: “I am dismayed at some of the media comments on my visit and I would like to say I undertook the visit and made an assessment, not a judgement, based on personal witness, in good faith and to the best of my ability.”

    Toby Cadman, a barrister instructed by Detained in Dubai to act on behalf of the princess, told Review: “I am extremely disappointed that she would lend herself to what has been interpreted as a whitewash. We have requested an independent assessment of [Princess Latifa’s] state of mind and her physical well-being. It’s up to the United Nations to be satisfied that she is not being detained against her will.” Then in January 2019 Mrs Robinson stated that she contacted Michelle Bachelet, UN high commissioner for human rights. On 18/02/2019 Former Irish president Mary Robinson said she has no regrets over getting involved in the case of a Dubai princess who had tried to flee the UAE.

    Exactly one year on from Latifa’s dramatic capture at sea, rights groups told The Independent they were deeply concerned about her welfare and still had no knowledge of what happened to her between her March 2018 capture and December when she reappeared in Dubai. Pleas to the UAE for an independent delegation to be granted access to the royal to assess her, have gone unanswered. “Human Rights Watch is still calling for her to be able to travel to a third country where we and other monitors can be assured she is able to speak freely and independently without fear of retaliation,” Hiba Zayadin of HRW told The Independent.Ms Robinson is not equipped to make an evaluation of Latifa, who was in the presence of people who allegedly forcibly disappeared her,” she added.

    Amnesty International put out a similar call. “There has been no reply from the UAE, which has never responded to anything regarding domestic human-rights abuses that Amnesty International has attempted to raise with them,” said Amnesty’s Devin Kenney.

    Now, 16 February 2021, after new footage was shared by BBC Panorama, in which the 35-year-old daughter of the ruler of Dubai has confirmed that commandos drugged her as she tried to flee by boat and flew her back to detention and accused her father, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, of holding her “hostage”, Mrs Robinson has stated that she feels “horribly tricked” by the family of Princess Latifa Al Maktoum, and has joined in calls for immediate international action in order to establish Princess Latifa’s current condition and whereabouts

    Fortunately some of the worst rumours turn out not to be true e.g.that  Sheikha Latifa was killed during early 2019 through extreme physical torture by the female maids inside the palace.[https://www.weeklyblitz.net/news/fraud-racket-plays-new-trick-centering-a-murdered-princess/].

    Robinson is rightly revered for her life’s work, and that work is not invalidated by her unacceptable interference in the case of Princess Latifa. But her reputation has been tarnished by this.

    For those interested in the many articles about his case:

    This post was originally published on Hans Thoolen on Human Rights Defenders and their awards.

  • Professor Noam Chomsky co-wrote Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of the Mass Media, which famously argued that the mainstream media’s role was all about suppressing criticism of the powerful. Now recent moves in the UK are about to see that ‘manufactured consent’ taken to a whole new level.

    These big media players won’t be content with this greater dominance.  And they, along with the help of the government, will do everything they can to crush the opposition.

    New kids on the block?

    The national mainstream media in the UK has always been dominated by the Conservative right. The Times, the Sunday Times and the Sun are owned by Rupert Murdoch and family via News UK, in turn, owned by News Corp. The main shareholder of the Daily Mail (as well as the i newspaper) is by viscount Rothermere. The Daily Telegraph and the Sunday Telegraph are owned by billionaire Frederick Barclay. And the Daily Express is owned by Reach (which also owns the Daily Star and the Daily Mirror). Each newspaper offers similar political content but tweaked for different audiences.

    As for broadcast news, the main players are the BBC (funded by the licence fee) ITV, Channel 4, and Sky News (each dependent on advertising).

    But there are now old players masquerading as new players waiting in the wings.

    News UK TV

    In August and September 2020, Murdoch and his sidekick Rebekah Brooks met regularly with UK government ministers, including prime minister Boris Johnson.

    Then in February 2021, Ofcom was reported to have given its approval for Murdoch and Brooks to launch News UK TV, an outlet that will undoubtedly reflect the political leanings of its owner.

    Meanwhile, it’s understood that former editor of the Daily Mail, Paul Dacre, is rumoured to become the next chair of Ofcom.

    GB News

    And this isn’t the only new upcoming media venture. The “right-leaningGB News, which is part-funded by Legatum, a Dubai investment firm that via its chair is linked to the Brexit-backing Legatum Institute.

    GB News is headed by Angelos Frangopoulos, a former Sky News Australia boss. In 2018, former Labor minister Craig Emerson quit Sky News Australia after it “broadcast an interview with far-right extremist Blair Cottrell“. No doubt GB News’ politics will be of a similar hue.

    According to Byline:

    GB News appears to be owned by a company called ‘All Perspectives Limited’, which is in turn equally owned by media moguls Mark Schneider and Andrew Cole.

    Cole is a director and board member at Liberty Global – a multinational telecommunications company with roughly 47,000 employees. According to the trading website Wallmine, Cole is also a shareholder at Liberty, reportedly owning stock worth more than $1 million.

    Liberty Global has an interest in mainstream broadcasting in the UK, owning 9.9% of ITV Plc, the company that effectively owns and operates the ITV network. There has even been speculation that Liberty could launch a full takeover of ITV, with this rumour circulating via City AM as recently as May.

    Byline adds that Virgin Media is also owned by Liberty.

    Political cronyism or conflict of interest?

    But it doesn’t stop there.

    In January, it was reported that Richard Sharp, a former Goldman Sachs banker who donated an estimated £416,189 to the Conservative Party, is to be chair of the BRichard Sharp's donations to Tory partyBC’s board of directors.

    Here are some of the donations he made to the Conservative Party:

    The Guardian also reported that:

    Sharp’s family foundation donates to the Institute for Policy Research, an obscure charitable organisation that funnels money to the CPS [Centre for Policy Studies] – as well as to other organisations aligned with the right of the Conservative party, among them the Taxpayers Alliance, MigrationWatch UK and News-watch, an organisation that has produced a number of reports alleging anti-EU bias in BBC reporting.

    Sharp happens to be the former boss of UK chancellor Rishi Sunak. He was also an economic adviser to Boris Johnson when mayor of London. Sharp will join Conservative supporter Tim Davie, who took over as BBC director general last September. It’s reported that Davie met with former Downing Street special advisers Dominic Cummings and Lee Cain some two weeks after he assumed the role, although no minutes of that meeting are available.

    Meanwhile, the Johnson-led government is accused of blacklisting journalists and doing its best to sabotage freedom of information requests.

    Manufacturing consent

    The media landscape in the UK is undergoing a major shift. More right-wing players are stepping forward to work alongside media moguls, establishing control both in existing organisations and in creating new ones. It’s nothing less than a media coup, with the beneficiaries being the Conservative Party and their friends in business.

    Moreover, the right-wing media monopoly will no doubt want to destroy all effective opposition to its political dominance, including using any means it can to eliminate independent media.

    Or as Chomsky puts it better, a manufacturing of consent:

    Featured image via Youtube screengrab

    By Tom Coburg

    This post was originally published on The Canary.

  • The Chinese Foreign Ministry has demanded an apology from the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) for its recent coverage of COVID-19, saying the BBC used a clip about an anti-terrorism exercise, claiming it was for pandemic control. The BBC responded: it will continue to uphold the “principle of justice”. For more on this, CGTN talked to Martin Jacques, a senior research fellow at the London School of Economics.

    The post Interview with Martin Jacques on BBC Coverage of China first appeared on Dissident Voice.

    This post was originally published on Dissident Voice.

  • The Chinese Foreign Ministry has demanded an apology from the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) for its recent coverage of COVID-19, saying the BBC used a clip about an anti-terrorism exercise, claiming it was for pandemic control. The BBC responded: it will continue to uphold the “principle of justice”. For more on this, CGTN talked to Martin Jacques, a senior research fellow at the London School of Economics.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • The BBC has shown contempt for Children’s Mental Health Week. Because during one of its flagship news programmes, it repeated a piece of Tory propaganda. It did so without question – giving viewers the impression the government is spending £2bn on young people’s mental health. This seems completely untrue.

    The BBC: ‘look what the government is doing!’

    This year’s Children’s Mental Health Week is running from 1-7 February. Smack-bang in the middle of this, BBC News at Six did a segment on the topic. It was in relation to education during the coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic. During host George Alagiah’s introduction to it, he claimed the Department of Health and Social Care (DoHSC) told the BBC that it was:

    providing an extra £2bn to help young people.

     

    The full segment did not mention the £2bn figure again. Funny that – because it’s hard to figure out where £2bn funding for young people’s mental health might have come from.

    Hang on…

    So what money has been spent on children’s mental health?

    In November, chancellor Rishi Sunak said an extra £500m was going into mental health services overall. Prior to this, in May, the government also put £5m into mental health care via Public Health England. So, during the pandemic, the government has spent just over half a billion on mental health services. While some of this money has been pledged to young people’s services, the amount isn’t specified, and these figures are for mental health support across all ages.

    Over recent years, there have been additional schemes, like the £750m fund for charities, and it’s given some of this to groups like Childline and Adoption UK. But the government did not ringfence any of this money for Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS). In 2015, the Tory government said it would spend an additional £1.4bn on CAMHS up until the end of 2020. It also added another £3.3m in 2019. But this is ‘old’ money, not current funding – and it adds up to £1.7bn, not £2bn.

    All this comes after the Tory / Lib Dem coalition government cut CAMHS funding by £50m. But fast-forward to December 2020, and as Pulse reported, CAMHS was still in chaos. So, the pandemic and the government’s wilful lack of extra CAMHS support will have just made the situation worse.

    Another option…

    But there is another option that the DoHSC might have been referring to. And while it was funding for young people, it wasn’t funding for children’s mental health services.

    This Is Money reported that in July 2020, Sunak announced a new jobs scheme. Called Kickstart, it’s supposed to help young people to find work. This Is Money noted that the idea was:

    to get young people on Universal Credit, who have lost jobs and opportunities because of coronavirus, back to work.

    So, how much is the government spending on the Kickstart scheme? Yes, you guessed it: £2bn.

    This has been the only government spending on young people during the pandemic that amounts to £2bn.

    Untruths during Children’s Mental Health Week

    The Canary asked the BBC Press Office for comment. We wanted to know why it did not explain the £2bn figure may not have been for mental health. But we also asked if it knew about government spending that we didn’t. A spokesperson said:

    We are confident that our report was a fair and accurate reflection of events.

    So, did the DoHSC mislead the BBC? If so, did the BBC not bother to fact-check its claim. Or maybe there’s a secret pot of £2bn somewhere in the DoHSC that only it and the BBC know about. A further possibility is that the DoHSC is referring to money pledged before the pandemic, all the way back to 2015; money that had nothing to do with the current crisis in CAMHS, and had already run out by the end of last year.

    Either way, for the BBC to claim that the DoHSC is unquestionably spending £2bn on young people in the context of mental health is highly misleading. It’s also disrespectful during a week supposed to be dedicated to supporting children’s mental health. Given the public service broadcaster’s long history of spinning for government, we shouldn’t really be surprised.

    Featured image via C-S featured – YouTube and Pixy

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on The Canary.

  • In response to Children’s Mental Health Awareness Week, Boris Johnson announced that the government has appointed Love Island star Dr Alex George to be the nation’s youth mental health ambassador. The A&E doctor has been tasked with prioritising mental health in the wake of the coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic which has had a devastating impact on children and young people’s mental health.

    However, the problem goes far deeper. Thanks to a decade of Tory austerity, children’s mental health services are at breaking point and have been for years. Service users and campaigners took to Twitter to highlight the government glossing over the deeply entrenched problems of a criminally underfunded, understaffed service.

    Government cuts

    Mental health campaigner Ilona Burton shared some shocking facts about government cuts to Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS):

    “Underfunded” and “understaffed”

    Steph Horrocks highlighted their experience of being rushed through an “underfunded/understaffed” system:

    One parent recalled children’s mental health services letting down her son with autism on a number of occasions:

    A former service user shared their experience of late diagnosis:

    Jessica Thorman highlighted an issue that many young people face – an end to support upon turning 18. The abrupt removal of mental health support at this stage in life can be extremely disruptive and detrimental to young people’s mental health:

    What needs to change?

    Centre for Education and Youth associate Alix Robertson concluded that children’s mental health services need proper funding and government support:

    Beyond funding, co-founder of the Speak Up Space suggested that children’s mental health services are in dire need of reform:

    It’s clear that the government’s ‘focus’ on children’s mental health this week is a sham. Children and young people don’t need a celebrity ambassador, they need real support provided by fully funded services and trained staff with capacity to help them. If the government keeps cutting away at these vital services, the consequences for the next generation will be utterly devastating.

    Featured image via @BorisJohnson/Twitter

    By Sophia Purdy-Moore

    This post was originally published on The Canary.

  • Everyone deserves a safe and healthy place to call home. In Lagos, Nigeria corruption brings crime to every level of a society and causes infrastructure to languish. Dance can be attention grabbing, visceral, and powerful way to communicate ideas and emotions when political and legislative avenues are fruitless. This is why BBC World talked to Center for Artistic Activism alumni, Ozegbe Sunday “Valu” Obiajulu about his public, political, dance performances. Watch:

    “How do you bring government’s attention to the glight of your community? For Ozegbe Sunday Obiajulu, the answer is through dance. He lives in Oworonshoki one of the most deprived communities in Nigeria’s biggest city, Lagos. The area is known for high levels of crime and a chronic lack of infrastructure.

    Oiajulu hopes is street performances can bring about change. Here’s his story…”

    BBC World

    This post was originally published on News – The Center for Artistic Activism.

  • by Leo Watkins

    On 9 December last year, mere days before the General Election, Boris Johnson was having a bad news day. He was televised in the morning trying to avoid being confronted by a reporter’s evidence of a young boy sleeping on the floor of an NHS hospital (with the insinuation being that he was being denied proper medical care). Later in the day, his health secretary, Matt Hancock, told journalists he had been assaulted by anti-Tory protesters outside Leeds general hospital. This account was repeated by senior journalists until video footage emerged showing that Hancock had actually only walked into a protestor’s hand.

    Licence fee abolition as a ‘dead cat’

    In response, a question from a reporter about TV licences at a press conference allowed Johnson to pull off a classic case of what his former campaign advisor, Lynton Crosby, infamously dubbed the “dead cat” strategy: you respond to a bad news cycle by putting something surprising and attention-grabbing on the table to distract everyone and change the topic of conversation. In this case, Johnson mooted the idea of getting rid of the TV licence altogether.[1] (Of course, it helps if your fellow right-wingers in the press and the main broadcasters are all too happy to change the topic too.)

    The BBC’s existence has long challenged beliefs that the market ought to be the sole judge of value, and that requiring the public to pay for some broadcasting with public service rather than commercial aims is an infringement on freedom. In addition, the right-wing press tends to believe that a key reason it finds it difficult to make money online is the combined fault of, on the one hand, digital giants like Facebook and Google for monopolising advertising revenue, and on the other, the BBC for providing a decent, free source of news which reduces the need to take out a digital subscription to a newspaper to have adequate sources of news. Digital ‘convergence’ has put the BBC and the national press in much more direct competition than in the past, when the latter had print and the former had radio and TV: mediums whose use overlapped to some extent, but not entirely.

    Today, conservative ideology and evolving press commercial interests have combined to make any negative story about the BBC even more interesting to right-wing newspaper editors than it was before. As an experienced politician and former newspaper journalist himself, it’s fair to assume Johnson knew that when he threw the ‘abolishing the licence fee’ cat onto the table. And indeed, the right-wing press dutifully picked up on and prioritised the story.

    After the Conservative victory on 12 December, the Government moved quickly to brief the media that changing the BBC would rank high on its priority list. There was some suggestion of ‘getting even’ with the BBC for its apparently unfair treatment of the Party during the election campaign – despite, or perhaps because of, vociferous complaints of the same from supporters of Labour and Jeremy Corbyn, and despite the Conservatives’ large Parliamentary majority.

    Government control over the licence fee

    The Government’s immediate options for changing the BBC are limited. The Government will get to appoint a new chair of the BBC board when David Clementi’s term finishes next year, but it can’t get rid of the licence fee before the end of the current Royal Charter period, which lasts until the end of 2026. The Charter does, however, provide for a ‘mid-term review’ of BBC governance, and an opportunity to set the licence fee level for the five years from 2022.

    Government control over the level of the licence fee – the BBC’s primary source of funding – has, particularly since the 1980s, been used repeatedly as a means of exerting influence over the Corporation. In 2010, George Osborne imposed severe real-terms cuts on the BBC by keeping the licence fee level flat in cash terms. According to the BBC’s 2019/20 Annual Report, its income is 31% lower today than it would have been if the level had increased in line with inflation. While the BBC may draw an increasing amount of its income from commercial sources, 71% of its income in 2019-20 still came from the licence fee. And commercial revenue sources come with different constraints, like what foreign distributors want to buy.

    The BBC is facing intense competition for audiences from big, new digital rivals whose spending on content is rapidly rising, like Netflix, Amazon, Disney and Apple, alongside familiar rivals like ITV and Sky (now owned by Comcast). There is dramatic cost inflation in the most in-demand formats, like original scripted fictional series. (Netflix reportedly spent an enormous $130m on two series of The Crown, for example.) In this situation, even real-terms increases in the level of the licence fee aren’t enough for the BBC to keep pace.

    The BBC’s income from licence fees is determined not only by the licence fee’s level, but by its method of collection too. A high rate of licence fee evasion would slash its budget just as surely as an inadequate licence fee settlement. At the moment, the BBC manages collection efficiently: collection costs are a small percentage of revenue (3.6%) and the rate of evasion has remained low for many years, at around 6-7%. But that might not continue.

    Decriminalising licence fee evasion

    In February, Government sources briefed the press that the Government was planning to decriminalise licence fee evasion. The DCMS launched a consultation, claiming that “the broadcasting landscape has changed” since 2015 when an independent review of the matter by David Perry QC concluded there was “no compelling basis for change” to the current system. The DCMS didn’t commission a new review to demonstrate its claim. For the DCMS, the obvious danger of doing so is that an independent review can’t be relied upon to provide the desired answer.

    The case usually made for decriminalisation is quite simple. There are two main arguments. The first is that prosecutions for evasion are ‘clogging up’ magistrates’ courts, at great cost to the taxpayer. The Perry Review dealt with this argument by citing evidence that, in 2013, they may have represented 11% of cases handled, but only took up 0.3% of court time because they were quick to process and many defendants pleaded guilty by post. The cost to the taxpayer is small: around £5m a year. The Government, not the BBC, gets the proceeds from fines that courts impose for evasion.

    The key argument, though, is that a criminal penalty is an unfair, disproportionate and heavy-handed sanction for evasion. However, that argument’s apparent strength is partly based on some basic misconceptions:

    • The first misconception that those that think a criminal penalties for license fee evasion are unfair tend to harbor, is that anyone convicted of licence fee evasion gets a lasting criminal record. In fact, it’s a ‘non-recordable offence’ which doesn’t show up on DBS checks.
    • The second misconception is that people hear ‘criminal penalty’ and think it means they will go to jail for TV licence evasion. That isn’t what happens. TV Licensing – the BBC by another name – isn’t looking for excuses to lock people up. In fact, even where evasion is proven, all that happens in the first instance is that TV Licensing sends people letters telling them to buy a TV licence. If they don’t, and if TV Licensing decides it has enough evidence against them, eventually they will be summoned to the local magistrates’ court for a hearing. At any stage, TV Licensing will drop proceedings if people buy a licence.
    •  If convicted at the hearing, people get a fine whose level is set taking contextual factors, like ability to pay, into account. Payment can be instalments – £5 a week is the usual maximum for those in receipt of state benefits. The average fine in 2018 was £176, the legal maximum is £1,000. The Commons DCMS committee noted that the punishment is similar to using a vehicle untaxed or without insurance. Nobody goes to prison for licence fee evasion.
    •  If someone repeatedly fails to pay a fine for licence fee evasion imposed by the court, despite having been proven able to do so, they may eventually receive a prison sentence – but only once all other enforcement methods have been exhausted. This is the same as for any other court-imposed fine for any other number of minor offences – council tax evasion, for instance. The Perry Review was at pains to point all this out back in 2015.

    In 2018, proceedings were commenced against 129,446 people for licence fee evasion, of whom 121,203 were convicted (the majority of non-convictions were because people bought a licence in the meantime), and only five people were imprisoned for not paying court fines that included – but were not necessarily limited to – fines for licence fee evasion. To reiterate: imprisonment for court fines only occurs as a last resort, when all other collection methods have been exhausted.

    The unfair distribution of the licence fee burden

    It is nevertheless true that this system is manifestly unfair. The licence fee’s cost to each household takes no account of households’ disposable income and resultant (in)ability to pay. (Exceptions are those over-75, who get a free licence if in receipt of pension credit, those in long-term care, who pay £7.50 a year, and the severely sight impaired, who get 50% off.) On that basis, people argue that criminalising evasion amounts to criminalising people for being too poor to pay. They then say that, in order to ease the burden on the poorest, we should replace the criminal penalty for evasion with a civil one.

    The premise of this argument is true, but its conclusion does not follow. Clearly, the flat cost of the licence fee – like the flat costs of other utilities like gas, electricity, water and household internet – is hardest to meet for those on the lowest incomes. When Amelia Gentleman, the Guardian’s social affairs correspondent, went to a magistrates’ court in 2014 to observe proceedings for licence fee evasion offences, she estimated that most cases involve people in poverty or financial difficulties. A wave of recent changes to council tax benefit eligibility, occasioned by local government austerity, seemed to have exacerbated those difficulties.

    But not only does the argument’s conclusion not follow, it’s patently ridiculous. First of all, while the licence fee is indeed a distributionally regressive ‘flat tax’, changing the penalty for evading it does nothing to ease its financial burden on those who continue to pay it. The argument for decriminalisation implies actively wanting the rate of evasion to rise. Secondly, there’s no guarantee that it will be the poorest or the least able to pay who will successfully evade payment. The assumption that it will be, seems to reflect a Victorian class prejudice that the poorest are the most skilled at getting away with breaking the law. Of course, as far as tax evasion in general goes, the truth is the opposite. In reality, some people would get away with evasion and some wouldn’t; of those who did, many would be well-off people who are perfectly able to pay; the result would be arbitrary and unfair.

    What the people making this argument therefore implicitly concede – indeed, seem actively to want – is that decriminalisation would cause an increase in evasion. It would do so, first, because replacing the criminal penalty with a civil one would hugely complicate enforcement. At the moment, to prove someone was guilty of the offence, TV Licensing just has to prove they were watching TV without a licence at some point. To prove you owe the BBC a civil debt, on the other hand, it would have somehow to prove the duration in which you watched TV unlicensed. The evidence-gathering necessary would often not prove cost-effective, given the amount likely to be recovered.

    The BBC estimates that the cost of decriminalisation would be around £300m annually – due to increased collection costs and reduced income – equating to around 9% of its licence fee income in 2019-20, or 6% of its total income.[2] In other words, this policy is another Conservative attack on BBC funding, pure and simple, cynically dressed up by its supporters as a sincere concern to protect the poorest. The insincerity of that concern is even more clear from a cursory examination of the alternative enforcement method: civil penalties enforced through the civil court system.

    For a civil penalty to have anything like the deterrent effect necessary to prevent widespread evasion, the BBC has estimated a financial penalty of around £500 would be required. Such a penalty would not take into account people’s ability to pay, by definition. The result is that some people would, perversely, end up owing more from a civil penalty than a court fine for evasion.

    To collect unpaid penalties or debts, the BBC would have to get a county court judgement (CCJ) authorising bailiffs to go and seize property. CCJs linger on people’s credit records, often for several years. They impact people’s ability to get a phone contract or car insurance, to take out a loan, or even to get a job (some employers check credit records). This doesn’t seem a way to ease the burden on people living in poverty.

    The way forward: two suggestions

    There are two real solutions to the unquestionable and appalling fact that, in Britain today, some people are so poor they find it hard to afford the £157.50 annual cost of a TV licence. The first would be to alleviate the underlying poverty. It is eminently within the state’s power to do so. But in the low-growth, post-2008 era, it would require a willingness on the part of the state to raise taxes on the well-off and aggressively reduce tax avoidance by wealthy individuals and large corporations. The whole trend of Conservative policy over the last decade has been in the opposite direction. Austerity hit the poorest the hardest, which is probably why the number of licence fee evasion cases rose after 2010.

    The second solution would be to exempt low-income households from paying the licence fee. In Germany, low-income households are exempt from the broadcasting levy. In Finland, the broadcasting income tax is not payable below a defined income threshold. Free TV licences for the poorest million households in Britain would therefore be neither internationally unprecedented, nor financially unaffordable. It would cost the Government a mere £157.5m a year, approximately 0.02% of the 2019/20 Government budget, less than the cost of two RAF F-35 stealth fighter jets (cost: £92m each).

    In the long run, the licence fee could be replaced with a more progressive and universal funding mechanism. The Finnish broadcasting income tax, for example, seems to be the most egalitarian funding mechanism in Europe. The UK Government’s Minister of State for Media, John Whittingdale, was chair of the DCMS committee when it looked at that option alongside the German household broadcasting levy. The Times reported that the BBC internally favours the latter.

    But some parts of the Conservative Party – and some in Number 10 – would seem to want the BBC to become, either wholly or in part, an ‘opt-in’, subscription-funded service. How much of the BBC you get would be contingent on your ability to pay. Quite apart from the cost and practical challenge of deploying conditional access to the technology across the country, the consequence would be to punish poverty in a different way: by depriving people of access to BBC programmes and services if they can’t afford them.

    Ultimately, this issue comes down to whether you agree that, as a society, we should make at least some journalism, education and culture freely available to everyone – regardless of ability to pay. When you consider the enormously important, formative role that these things play in the lives of children, for example, the contribution to cultural-educational inequality and exclusion implied by the private, subscription-funded route becomes especially egregious. If we accept that, then it follows that some kind of tax is necessary to pay for it. But there are methods of taxation much more progressive than the licence fee, which we could and should use to do so.

    The arguments for decriminalisation are based on false premises and absurd logic, motivated by a Conservative agenda to further reduce the BBC’s funding, make the current system intolerable to the BBC itself, and get it to accept a future of private, subscription funding – at least in part. But the right-wing vision for the BBC is an elitist and exclusionary one, dishonestly presented as a concern to expand freedom of choice. It should be exposed as such, and fought. Decriminalisation will require primary legislation, so it will soon be up to MPs and peers to decide whether they agree with this agenda. This situation calls for a high-profile campaign to oppose the measure, as part of a more general effort to reframe the debate on the future funding of public service broadcasting in progressive terms.

    [1] Johnson: “At this stage we are not planning to get rid of all TV licences, though I am certainly looking at it. … I think the system of funding out of what is effectively a general tax…bears reflection, let me put it that way. How long can you justify a system whereby everybody who has a TV has to pay to fund a particular set of TV and radio channels? That is the question.”

    [2] Television Licence Fee Trust Statement for the Year Ending 31 March 2020, p. 28, paragraph 10

    Leo Watkins is a PhD student in Media and Communications at Goldsmiths, University of London and lead researcher for the Media Reform Coalition for the UK component of the Media Influence Matrix Project, set up to investigate the influence of shifts in policy, funding sources and technology on contemporary journalism. The project is funded in the UK by the Joseph Rowntree Charitable Trust and is due to report in spring 2021.

    This blog was originally published by Media@LSE and is reproduced with their kind permission.

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  • Immediately after the outbreak of the pandemic, the Culture Select Committee launched an inquiry into the funding, regulation and remit of public service broadcasting. Given recent attacks on the BBC in particular by senior members of the government, including the prime minister, MRC believes it is vital both to defend the principle of public media but also to emphasise, once again, the need for deep-rooted reform and democratisation if actual PSBs are to meaningfully serve the public interest. We conclude our submission by arguing that:

    Public service content should be freely available to, and should equally serve, all citizens. This means adapting the principles of public service broadcasting for the digital age and ensuring that existing PSBs are adequately funded to meet this challenge. It will also require the creation of new public media organisations to work in partnership with the ‘legacy’ organisations as part of a new public digital media ecology. Public media content needs to be delivered in the future through modern, democratised digital public platforms and networks operating autonomously of government and the market. 

    You can read the full submission here.

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