The Asian Age

BBC apologises to female journalist over equal pay

Broadcaste­r settles issue; scribe donates full amount received to charity of her choice

- — PTI

London: The BBC on Friday said it has apologised to Carrie Gracie, a senior journalist at the centre of a gender pay row, and settled the issue by giving her back pay. Gracie resigned as BBC China editor in January in a dispute with the British public broadcaste­r over equal pay.

When she resigned, Gracie said she had been dismayed to find the BBC’s two male internatio­nal editors earned “at least 50 per cent more” than their two female counterpar­ts.

The BBC has now acknowledg­ed she was told she would be paid in line with the North America editor when she took the role, and she accepted the role on that understand­ing.

“The BBC acknowledg­es the specific circumstan­ces relating to Carrie’s appointmen­t, apologises for underpayin­g Carrie, and has now put this right. Carrie is donating the full amount received to a charity of her choice,” the company said in a statement.

BBC director- general Tony Hall said: “I am pleased that we’ve been able to move past our difference­s and work through things together; we can now look to the future.”

Gracie said: “I am glad to have been able to resolve this. It shows that we can make progress.”

Gracie added that she is “delighted to donate all the backdated pay from the BBC to help women striving for equality at work”.

The BBC said it had “reached an agreement to resolve their difference­s”. At her request, Gracie will now take up to six months of unpaid leave and will take on writing and speaking engagement­s about both China and gender equality.

Gracie quit because the two editors earned more than her 135,000 pounds- ayear salary. She went back to a job in the newsroom.

On January 26, six of the BBC’s leading male presenters agreed to take pay cuts following the revelation­s about equal salaries.

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