San Francisco Chronicle

BBC chief resigns over sex-abuse news reporting

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LONDON — The BBC’s top executive resigned late Saturday after the prestigiou­s broadcaste­r’s marquee news magazine wrongly implicated a British politician in a child sexabuse scandal, deepening the crisis that exploded after it decided not to air similar allegation­s against one of its own stars who police now say was one of the nation’s worst pedophiles.

In a brief statement outside BBC headquarte­rs, George Entwistle said he decided to do the “honorable thing” and step down after just eight weeks in the job.

John Whittingda­le, chairman of Britain’s Commons Culture, Media and Sport Committee, said Entwistle had no choice but to go, as the BBC’s management appears to have “lost their grip” on the organizati­on.

Entwistle assumed the mantle as head of the BBC only two months ago from Mark Thompson, who will become chief executive of the New York Times Co. this month.

A month into the job, the BBC was thrown into crisis with allegation­s that Jimmy Savile, the renowned BBC TV host who died last year, sexually abused up to several hundred children — some of them on BBC premises — and the revelation that the BBC’s own “Newsnight” investigat­ive program had shelved an investigat­ion into the allegation­s.

The decision to call off the investigat­ion prompted deep soul-searching at the venerated broadcaste­r and assurances from Entwistle that he would get to the bottom of the decision.

But the furor was reignited when the same program aired a report on Nov. 2 about alleged sex abuse in Wales in the 1970s and 1980s. During the program, victim Steve Messham claimed he had been abused by a senior Conservati­ve Party figure.

The BBC didn’t name the alleged abuser, but online rumors focused on Alistair McAlpine, a Conservati­ve Party member of the House of Lords. On Friday, McAlpine issued a fierce denial and threatened to sue.

Messham then said he had been mistaken about his abuser’s identity and apologized to McAlpine, prompting fury over the BBC’s decision to air the report, the suspension of investigat­ive programs at “Newsnight” and mounting questions over Entwistle’s leadership.

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