The Scottish Mail on Sunday

BBC to release Bashir scandal emails after losing long FoI battle

- By Mark Hookham

THE BBC will release potentiall­y explosive documents about the Martin Bashir scandal next month after losing an 18-month freedom of informatio­n battle.

The dossier of internal emails will reveal how Corporatio­n bosses handled the controvers­y two years ago. Last night the BBC apologised for wrongly claiming the documents did not exist.

The release threatens to reignite one of the BBC’s most humiliatin­g episodes and torpedo director general Tim Davie’s attempts to draw a line under the affair.

A devastatin­g report by former Supreme Court judge Lord Dyson last year detailed how Bashir weaved a web of deception to land his notorious 1995 Panorama interview with Princess Diana and ruled that the BBC had covered up what it knew about his activities.

Lord Dyson’s inquiry followed a decision by the Corporatio­n in October 2020 to finally release a 67-page dossier of memos and minutes from 1995 and 1996 indicating how it had hushed up the scandal.

But investigat­ive journalist Andy Webb – who first requested this informatio­n in 2007 – believed the BBC had not released all of its incriminat­ing evidence and that its failures to investigat­e Bashir had been far more extensive than the documents showed.

His suspicions deepened when Lord Dyson’s subsequent inquiry unearthed new documents, including a damning memo written by a senior BBC boss in April 1996 reading, ‘The Diana story is probably now dead, unless [Earl Spencer, Diana’s brother] talks. There’s no indication that he will.’

In June last year Mr Webb requested all internal emails between BBC managers and the BBC’s informatio­n office sent from September to November 2020 that related to the Bashir scandal.

The Corporatio­n initially told him it had documents but it did not have to release them.

In February this year the InforJune, mation Commission­er ruled that some of the documents should be released, prompting the BBC to send Mr Webb one document, which he described as ‘wholly anodyne’.

For the next six months, BBC bosses insisted their archive contained no further documents and, in

launched an unsuccessf­ul bid to have Mr Webb’s case struck out.

As recently as October 6, BBC lawyers insisted it was ‘not concealing any material; there is no indication that further material within the scope of the request might exist’.

But, in an extraordin­ary U-turn 25 days later, the BBC admitted that, following additional email searches, ‘a number of documents’ had indeed been discovered. On Friday, it informed Mr Webb it would release them to him next month.

Mr Webb said: ‘The way the BBC have ducked and dived over the last 18 months – all at the licence-payers’ expense – makes me even more convinced that the people running it today have something to hide.’

The BBC last night said it had apologised to Mr Webb for the ‘inadverten­t errors that have been identified with earlier searches that were conducted’.

‘Broadcaste­r ducked and dived for 18 months’

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