Gary Lineker says BBC should ‘hold its head in shame’ for dropping Gaza film | BBC

Gary Lineker, BBC’nin Gaza’teki medical officials can not show a documentary about the status of “shame on the head,” he said.
The old match host of the day, “BBC’s top peak” people, the company’s Gaza: doctors under the attack under the attack after the controversial decision said they failed on the conflict.
Lineker criticized his former employer for the first time since he left the publisher in May. His separation came after he apologized for strengthening the online material with anti -Semitic connotations. A video containing a picture of a rats about Gaza, images used to attack Jews during the Nazi period.
A clearly emotional Liser was talking about a special monitoring of the Gaza Medics documentary in London on Thursday night, and after the show, he conducted a question and answer session with the producers.
“It had to be seen, it really had to be seen – I think everyone would join it,” he said. “I think the BBC should be ashamed.
“As a person who has been working for 30 years for the company, it was really destructive to see how it fell in the last one or two years, because I defended him and defended him against his allegations that it was partial. He’s always talking about impartiality.
“The truth right now, [there is a problem] At the top of the BBC. Negative [all] BBC because there are thousands and thousands of people working in the BBC, who are good people, who understand and see what is happening here. We see it on our phones every day. The problem is that they focus on the pressure from the top. This is a concern and I think when many people will respond to it, and something that will come to many of the complexity. “
“Gary Lineker is a good man. A place about BBC.” He answered a video of Lineker’s comments.
He approached BBC comments. Previously, he said that he was trying to find ways to use the documentary material within the scope of the news, but the producers were made a final decision to leave the film completely after leaving Bodrum films.
With the General Manager Tim Davie, there has been an important internal unrest in the failure of the program. More than 100 BBC staff signed a letter criticizing the decision to quit the film.
Bob Vylan’s Glastonbury performance finishes a week for the BBC, which is also shot with the sprinkle, because it cannot cut live feeding. Davie came under the important pressure of the ministers through the publication. During the live stream, Bobby Vylan, the real name of Pascal Robinson-Foster, directed the cheering of “death, IDF to IDF” referring to the Israeli Defense Forces in Glastonbury last Saturday.
Davie is expected to take a vote of confidence from the BBC Board and President Samir Shah, while more young figures are expected to take the crime for the incident. In BBC, there are unfounded reports that Lorna Clarke, who controls the commission of pop music, has returned from its duties.
A BBC spokesman: “We invite people not to speculation, especially in relation to any person.” He said.
Those who do not contain BBC pointed to editorial cuts as aggravating problems in monitoring live streams. One said that most of the BBC staff working on Glastonbury are volunteer from other teams, especially in digital flows, especially in digital streams.




