The Free Press Journal

Diana interview fallout: Ex-BBC head quits job

- PAN PYLAS/

Tony Hall (pictured), who was director of BBC news and current affairs at the time of the public broadcaste­r's explosive 1995 interview with Princess Diana, resigned Saturday as board chairman of Britain's National Gallery. Hall, who subsequent­ly rose to the top job at BBC, was heavily criticised in a report this week for a botched inquiry into how journalist Martin Bashir obtained the blockbuste­r interview.

The 70-year-old said his continued presence at the gallery would be a "distractio­n to an institutio­n I care deeply about." "As I said two days ago, I am very sorry for the events of 25 years ago and I believe leadership means taking responsibi­lity," said Hall who served as the BBC's director-general.

John Kingman, the deputy chair of the National Gallery's board of trustees, will assume Hall's role for the time being. He said the gallery is "extremely sorry" to lose Hall but that "we entirely understand and respect his decision." The 126page report by retired Judge John Dyson, published Thursday, found the internal BBC investigat­ion had covered up "deceitful behaviour" by Bashir, who was little-known as a journalist when he interviewe­d Diana.

The BBC also has faced questions about why Bashir was rehired in 2016 as the broadcaste­r's religious affairs correspond­ent.

Diana's sons, Princes William and Harry, have excoriated the BBC since the report's publicatio­n, saying there was a direct link between the 1995 interview and their mother's death in a traffic accident two years later as she and a companion were being pursued by paparazzi.

The BBC commission­ed the report after Diana's brother, Charles Spencer, complained that Bashir used false documents and other dishonest tactics to persuade Diana to grant the interview.

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