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"The key is, if it does not
hamper our primary obligation to deliver the news and information
to our viewers and listeners then we would be respectful of
that," said Byford.
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CAIRO — Amid a heated anti-hijab debate in the
West, the BBC, the largest broadcasting corporation in the world, said
it does not object to have news presenters wearing head covers,
refuting accusations of being too sensitive to the feelings of Muslims
viewers.
"The key is, if it does not hamper our primary
obligation to deliver the news and information to our viewers and
listeners then we would be respectful of that," Mark Byford, the
BBC Deputy Director-General told The Daily Telegraph on Sunday,
October 29.
Byford, who has overall responsibility for the
corporation's news division, said their job is to effectively
communicate to the audience the information they are delivering.
"As far as the issue of dress is concerned, it
must not get in the way of the audience being able to receive the
information in a clear and effective manner."
The BBC official stressed the case would be
different with face-covers.
"If the face is covered completely by the
veil, then that is a different issue to something else."
Many well-qualified British Muslim women are
suffering job discrimination and "ethnic penalties" merely
because of the way they dress, according to a study by the Equal
Opportunities Commission (EOC).
It said that 90% of Pakistani and
Bangladeshi-origin women were getting lower pay and suffering higher
rates of unemployment.
Islam sees hijab as an obligatory code of dress,
not a religious symbol displaying one’s affiliations.
As for the face veil, the majority of Muslim
scholars believe that a woman is not obliged to cover her face or
hands.
Scholars, however, believe that it is up to women
to decide whether to take on the veil.
Professionalism
The senior BBC executive brushed off accusations of
bias towards Islam.
"Do I believe that the BBC favors Islam
compared to Christianity? Absolutely not," he said.
"We absolutely recognize that the BBC has to
reflect all faiths which are relevant within the UK."
A week ago some of the BBC staff accused the
corporation of going too far in the pursuit of multiculturalism.
They said the BBC has an abnormally large number of
young employees of ethnic minorities.
"I do not accept that the BBC is crammed full
of soft liberals," said Byford.
He also ruled out that the BBC was over-represented
with people from ethnic minority communities.
"It is simply not true to say we are."
Britain is home to a sizable Muslim minority of
around 1.8 million.
The BBC executive also defended a recent interview
with a Taliban spokesman, noting that it was a matter of pure
professionalism.
"I thought it was an outstanding piece of work
and I back it 100 per cent. It was very responsibly done," he
stressed.
"It does the audience a disservice if we say
that there are British troops fighting under a great deal of pressure
but then we don't explain why the other side is fighting them."