The Borneo Post (Sabah)

BBC China editor quits in equal pay protest

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LONDON: BBC journalist Carrie Gracie announced 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.

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 highestpai­d 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 £150,000 (US$203,000, 169,000 euros) were shown to be men, according to the figures published in July.

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.

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.

“It is hugely regrettabl­e that an outstandin­g and award-winning journalist like Carrie Gracie feels she has no option but to resign from her post as China editor because the BBC has not valued her equally with her male counterpar­ts,” they said in a statement published by the BBC’s Lyse Doucet, chief internatio­nal correspond­ent.

Michelle Stanistree­t, general secretary of the UK’s National Union of Journalist­s, said the body was ‘determined to hold the BBC to account’ and reach settlement­s on behalf of women who have suffered a salary deficit. — AFP

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