BBC faces MasterChef UK scandal as regulator flags Gaza doco probe
The broadcaster's director-general, Tim Davie, had told lawmakers that the BBC received hundreds of complaints alleging that the documentary was biased against Israel – as well as hundreds more criticising the program's removal from its streaming service.
Directors Ken Loach and Mike Leigh and actor Riz Ahmed were among 500 media figures who signed a letter published by Artists for Palestine UK saying a 'political' campaign to discredit the program risked dehumanising Palestinian voices in the media.
BBC director-general Tim Davie is fighting criticism of the broadcaster on several fronts. Credit: AP
Davie said that the report identified 'a significant failing' in relation to accuracy in the documentary. Hoyo Films apologised for the mistake. Both firms said they would prevent similar errors in the future.
Separately, more than 100 BBC journalists wrote a letter to Davie earlier this month criticising the broadcaster's decision not to air another documentary, Gaza: Medics Under Fire . They expressed concerns it wasn't reporting ''without fear or favour' when it comes to Israel'.
The decision suggested that the BBC was an 'organisation that is crippled by the fear of being perceived as critical of the Israeli government', that letter said.
The BBC has been under intense scrutiny for its coverage touching on the war in Gaza. Last month, Prime Minister Keir Starmer and others condemned the broadcaster for livestreaming a performance by rap punk duo Bob Vylan, who led crowds at Glastonbury Festival in chanting 'death' to the Israeli military.
The Israel-Hamas war started after the militant group led an attack on southern Israel on October 7, 2023, killing around 1200 people and taking 251 hostage. Most of the hostages have been released in earlier ceasefires. Israel's offensive in Gaza has killed more than 58,000 Palestinians, more than half of them women and children, according to Gaza's Health Ministry.
The ministry, under Gaza's Hamas-run government, doesn't differentiate between civilians and combatants in its count. The UN and other international organisations see its figures as the most reliable statistics on war casualties. MasterChef report lands
The BBC said on Monday it will no longer work with MasterChef host Gregg Wallace after a report found that dozens of misconduct allegations made against the hit cooking show presenter were upheld.
The report, led by a law firm, said 45 out of the 83 allegations made against Wallace during his time on the show between 2005 and 2018 were substantiated. It said the majority of the claims related to 'inappropriate sexual language and humour', with a smaller number of allegations about Wallace 'being in a state of undress' and one incident of unwelcome physical contact.
Wallace, 60, stepped away from hosting the hit BBC reality show, which is made by an independent production company, last year while an investigation was launched into allegations by multiple women that he made inappropriate sexual comments and behaved inappropriately over almost two decades.
Gregg Wallace (right) with MasterChef UK co-host John Torode.
The BBC has come under pressure over how it handles sexual misconduct allegations and how Wallace had continued to front some of its most popular shows for so long despite the complaints.
The broadcaster issued a statement of apology, adding Wallace's 'return to MasterChef is untenable'.
'The BBC has informed Mr Wallace we have no plans to work with him in future,' it said. 'Although the full extent of these issues were not known at the relevant time, opportunities were missed to address this behaviour, both by the production companies running MasterChef and the BBC.'
The broadcaster previously said that Wallace was warned by his employers after a complaint in 2018, and an internal investigation at the time found his behaviour was 'unacceptable and unprofessional'.
The latest investigation found that there was little or no formal training or clear escalation procedures in place for staff – many of those working on the show were freelancers – leading to underreporting and normalisation of inappropriate behaviour.
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Wallace has strongly denied the claims, and previously stated that he will not be 'cancelled for convenience'.
He said in a statement Monday that he was 'deeply sorry for any distress' his behaviour caused, though he maintained that none of the most serious allegations against him were upheld.
'Some of my humour and language missed the mark. I never set out to harm or humiliate,' he said.
In December, he drew an angry backlash after he alleged that complaints about his behaviour came from 'a handful of middle-class women of a certain age'.
MasterChef is one of the BBC's most popular and long-running competition shows, spawning numerous spin-offs and adaptations in other countries, including MasterChef Australia.
Caroline Dinenage, who chairs parliament's culture, media and sport committee, said there was still a long way to go to tackle inappropriate behaviour in the creative industry when complainants still find it easier to take their allegations to the press rather than use internal processes.
Downing Street said it welcomed the BBC severing its ties with Wallace.
'We're clear that appropriate steps must be taken to ensure abuses of power are prevented from happening in the future,' a spokesman said.
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West Australian
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Perth Now
39 minutes ago
- Perth Now
UN says 875 Palestinians killed near Gaza aid sites
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A Reuters reporter heard at least four strikes as drones could be heard over the predominantly Druze city of Sweida on Tuesday and saw a damaged tank being towed away. Dozens of people have been killed in fighting in the region since Sunday. The upsurge in violence underlines the challenges facing interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa who has struggled to assert control over the area near the Israeli border since toppling Bashar al-Assad in December. While Sharaa has been buoyed by rapidly improving ties with US President Donald Trump's administration, the violence has highlighted lingering sectarian tensions and distrust among minority groups towards his Islamist-led government - distrust that was deepened by mass killings of Alawites in March. Israel, which has struck Syria several times in the name of protecting the Druze, carried out its latest attacks after influential Druze Sheikh Hikmat al-Hajri issued a statement accusing government troops of breaching a ceasefire and urging fighters to confront what he described as a barbaric attack. After al-Hajiri appeared in a recorded statement, Syrian Defence Minister Murhaf Abu Qasra declared that a complete ceasefire was in place, and saying government forces would only open fire if fired upon. Abu Qasra also said military police had been ordered to deploy in Sweida to "control military behaviour and hold violators accountable", the state news agency SANA reported. The Druze are a minority group whose faith is an offshoot of Islam and has followers in Israel, Syria and Lebanon. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defence Minister Israel Katz said they had ordered Israel's military to strike "regime forces" and weaponry brought to Sweida to be used against the Druze. In a statement, they said the deployment of government forces was in violation of a demilitarisation policy that had called on Damascus to refrain from bringing forces and weapons into southern Syria that pose a threat to Israel. "Israel is committed to preventing harm to the Druze in Syria due to the deep brotherhood alliance with our Druze citizens in Israel," they said. "We are acting to prevent the Syrian regime from harming them and to ensure the demilitarisation of the area adjacent to our border with Syria." The latest violence began on Sunday with fighting between armed Druze groups and Bedouin fighters in Sweida province, which displaced thousands of people. The Druze spiritual leadership said in a statement on Tuesday morning that it would allow Syrian forces to enter Sweida city to stop the bloodshed, calling on armed groups to surrender their weapons and co-operate with incoming troops. But hours later, al-Hajri, a vocal opponent of the new Syrian leadership, said the statement had been "imposed" on them by Damascus and Syrian troops had breached the arrangement by continuing to fire on residents. "We are being subject to a total war of extermination," he said in a recorded video statement. Convoys of Syrian army tanks, trucks and motorcycles entered parts of Sweida city by mid-morning and were continuing to fire on neighbourhoods there, the Reuters reporter in Sweida said. On Monday, Israel's military said it had carried out several strikes on tanks approaching Sweida "to prevent their arrival to the area" because they could pose a threat to Israel. Israel has carried out strikes against Syrian government forces in southwestern Syria for a second day, vowing to keep the area demilitarised and to protect the Druze minority as deadly clashes continue in the region at the Israeli frontier. A Reuters reporter heard at least four strikes as drones could be heard over the predominantly Druze city of Sweida on Tuesday and saw a damaged tank being towed away. Dozens of people have been killed in fighting in the region since Sunday. The upsurge in violence underlines the challenges facing interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa who has struggled to assert control over the area near the Israeli border since toppling Bashar al-Assad in December. While Sharaa has been buoyed by rapidly improving ties with US President Donald Trump's administration, the violence has highlighted lingering sectarian tensions and distrust among minority groups towards his Islamist-led government - distrust that was deepened by mass killings of Alawites in March. Israel, which has struck Syria several times in the name of protecting the Druze, carried out its latest attacks after influential Druze Sheikh Hikmat al-Hajri issued a statement accusing government troops of breaching a ceasefire and urging fighters to confront what he described as a barbaric attack. After al-Hajiri appeared in a recorded statement, Syrian Defence Minister Murhaf Abu Qasra declared that a complete ceasefire was in place, and saying government forces would only open fire if fired upon. Abu Qasra also said military police had been ordered to deploy in Sweida to "control military behaviour and hold violators accountable", the state news agency SANA reported. The Druze are a minority group whose faith is an offshoot of Islam and has followers in Israel, Syria and Lebanon. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defence Minister Israel Katz said they had ordered Israel's military to strike "regime forces" and weaponry brought to Sweida to be used against the Druze. In a statement, they said the deployment of government forces was in violation of a demilitarisation policy that had called on Damascus to refrain from bringing forces and weapons into southern Syria that pose a threat to Israel. "Israel is committed to preventing harm to the Druze in Syria due to the deep brotherhood alliance with our Druze citizens in Israel," they said. "We are acting to prevent the Syrian regime from harming them and to ensure the demilitarisation of the area adjacent to our border with Syria." The latest violence began on Sunday with fighting between armed Druze groups and Bedouin fighters in Sweida province, which displaced thousands of people. The Druze spiritual leadership said in a statement on Tuesday morning that it would allow Syrian forces to enter Sweida city to stop the bloodshed, calling on armed groups to surrender their weapons and co-operate with incoming troops. But hours later, al-Hajri, a vocal opponent of the new Syrian leadership, said the statement had been "imposed" on them by Damascus and Syrian troops had breached the arrangement by continuing to fire on residents. "We are being subject to a total war of extermination," he said in a recorded video statement. Convoys of Syrian army tanks, trucks and motorcycles entered parts of Sweida city by mid-morning and were continuing to fire on neighbourhoods there, the Reuters reporter in Sweida said. On Monday, Israel's military said it had carried out several strikes on tanks approaching Sweida "to prevent their arrival to the area" because they could pose a threat to Israel. Israel has carried out strikes against Syrian government forces in southwestern Syria for a second day, vowing to keep the area demilitarised and to protect the Druze minority as deadly clashes continue in the region at the Israeli frontier. A Reuters reporter heard at least four strikes as drones could be heard over the predominantly Druze city of Sweida on Tuesday and saw a damaged tank being towed away. Dozens of people have been killed in fighting in the region since Sunday. The upsurge in violence underlines the challenges facing interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa who has struggled to assert control over the area near the Israeli border since toppling Bashar al-Assad in December. While Sharaa has been buoyed by rapidly improving ties with US President Donald Trump's administration, the violence has highlighted lingering sectarian tensions and distrust among minority groups towards his Islamist-led government - distrust that was deepened by mass killings of Alawites in March. Israel, which has struck Syria several times in the name of protecting the Druze, carried out its latest attacks after influential Druze Sheikh Hikmat al-Hajri issued a statement accusing government troops of breaching a ceasefire and urging fighters to confront what he described as a barbaric attack. After al-Hajiri appeared in a recorded statement, Syrian Defence Minister Murhaf Abu Qasra declared that a complete ceasefire was in place, and saying government forces would only open fire if fired upon. Abu Qasra also said military police had been ordered to deploy in Sweida to "control military behaviour and hold violators accountable", the state news agency SANA reported. The Druze are a minority group whose faith is an offshoot of Islam and has followers in Israel, Syria and Lebanon. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defence Minister Israel Katz said they had ordered Israel's military to strike "regime forces" and weaponry brought to Sweida to be used against the Druze. In a statement, they said the deployment of government forces was in violation of a demilitarisation policy that had called on Damascus to refrain from bringing forces and weapons into southern Syria that pose a threat to Israel. "Israel is committed to preventing harm to the Druze in Syria due to the deep brotherhood alliance with our Druze citizens in Israel," they said. "We are acting to prevent the Syrian regime from harming them and to ensure the demilitarisation of the area adjacent to our border with Syria." The latest violence began on Sunday with fighting between armed Druze groups and Bedouin fighters in Sweida province, which displaced thousands of people. The Druze spiritual leadership said in a statement on Tuesday morning that it would allow Syrian forces to enter Sweida city to stop the bloodshed, calling on armed groups to surrender their weapons and co-operate with incoming troops. But hours later, al-Hajri, a vocal opponent of the new Syrian leadership, said the statement had been "imposed" on them by Damascus and Syrian troops had breached the arrangement by continuing to fire on residents. "We are being subject to a total war of extermination," he said in a recorded video statement. Convoys of Syrian army tanks, trucks and motorcycles entered parts of Sweida city by mid-morning and were continuing to fire on neighbourhoods there, the Reuters reporter in Sweida said. On Monday, Israel's military said it had carried out several strikes on tanks approaching Sweida "to prevent their arrival to the area" because they could pose a threat to Israel.