Las Vegas Review-Journal

■ BBC faces questions about its integrity after a scathing report on its 1995 interview with Princess Diana.

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LONDON — British broadcaste­r BBC, seen as a respected source of news and informatio­n around the world, is facing questions at home about its integrity following a scathing report on its explosive 1995 interview with Princess Diana.

Britain’s justice secretary said Friday that the government would review the rules governing oversight of the BBC after an investigat­ion found that one of its journalist­s used “deceitful behavior” to secure the interview and the corporatio­n obscured this misconduct for 25 years.

Princes William and Harry, Diana’s

sons, excoriated the BBC late Thursday, saying there was a direct link between the interview and their mother’s death in a traffic accident two years later as she and a companion were being pursued by paparazzi.

The interview on the Panorama program came under renewed scrutiny after Diana’s brother, Charles Spencer, complained that journalist Martin Bashir used false documents and other dishonest tactics to persuade Diana to grant the interview. As a result, the BBC commission­ed an investigat­ion by retired Judge John Dyson, who released a 127page report on his findings Thursday.

“It wasn’t just the decision of a reporter or a production team, there were decisions made much further up the chain about the conduct of these individual­s that have now proved, according to Lord Dyson, to be unfounded and wrong,” Justice Secretary Robert Buckland told the BBC.

The BBC, founded in 1922, is Britain’s publicly funded but editoriall­y independen­t national broadcaste­r. The rules governing its operations are set out in a royal charter that requires the corporatio­n to be impartial, act in the public interest and be open, transparen­t and accountabl­e.

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