The Asian Age

BBC China editor quits over gap in male- female pay

- THE ASIAN AGE

London, Jan. 8: BBC journalist Carrie Gracie announced on Monday she had quit her post as China editor in protest at an “indefensib­le pay gap” at the British broadcaste­r, winning support from dozens of colleagues.

Ms Gracie said she resigned last week over a “crisis of trust” which has engulfed the BBC since the broadcaste­r was forced last year to reveal the salaries of its highest- paid employees.

The disclosure­s showed “an indefensib­le pay gap between men and women doing equal work,” Gracie said in a blog post announcing her resignatio­n.

“These revelation­s damaged the trust of BBC staff,” she added, stating that up to 200 women employed by the broadcaste­r had made complaints over pay discrimina­tion in recent months.

Two- thirds of BBC staff earning more than $ 203,000 were shown to be men, according to the figures published in July.

Ms Gracie warned that a “bunker mentality” by managers so far “is likely to end in a disastrous legal defeat for the BBC and an exodus of female talent at every level”.

Her resignatio­n was widely reported by BBC news programmes, while the broadcaste­r said there was “no systemic discrimina­tion against women”.

The former China editor has returned to London and will resume her former post within the television newsroom. On Monday, she co- presented BBC Radio 4’ s Today programme, during which she said she was “moved” by the positive reaction to her decision which spoke of a “depth of hunger” for pay equality.

More than 130 journalist­s who are part of the BBC Women group backed her decision.

Michelle Stanistree­t, general secretary of the UK’s National Union of Journalist­s, said the body was “determined to hold the BBC to account”.

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