LONDON (AP) - One of Britain's leading academic
institutions, the London School of Economics, is accusing the BBC of putting
students at risk by using them as cover for a covert reporting trip to North
Korea.
The school says BBC's decision to send three TV
journalists to the secretive communist state in March to shoot a documentary
without governmental permission to work there by posing as members of a student
trip could have caused grave trouble for the pupils, if the deception had been
uncovered by North Korean authorities.
The squabble between two powerful British
institutions comes at a time of uncertainty caused by North Korea's bellicose
threats to launch a new medium-range missile at its enemies.
It brought more unwelcome attention to the BBC,
which has faced sustained criticism for its handling of an investigation into
alleged child sex abuse committed by the late Jimmy Savile, long a top BBC talk
show host.
The "Panorama" documentary on North Korea
based on the eight-day trip in March is set to air Monday night.
The BBC has thus far refused the university's plea
to keep it off the air to protect the students from possible retribution if
their identities are revealed on the show. The broadcaster said three students
who have asked to be removed from the show will have their images blurred so
they cannot be identified.
The trip was not organized by LSE but by a students'
society known as the Grimshaw Club. University officials said they did not know
about the BBC arrangement and would not have approved it if they had known
about BBC's plans.
The BBC's John Sweeney, who LSE officials say posed
as a post-graduate LSE student, said Sunday it was "entirely wrong"
for the university to try to prevent the broadcast. He said all of the students
had been told about the potential risk and had agreed to allow the journalists
to join the trip, adding that all were over 18 years of age and capable of
making their own decisions.
A BBC story about the trip that the network filed
online Sunday said Sweeney and a two-person crew that included his wife spent
"eight days undercover" in North Korea.
LSE student union general secretary Alex Peters-Day
said Sunday that the students were lied to and that at least one of the
students on the eight-day trip was not told in advance of the journalists'
participation.
"This is a student welfare issue," she
told a BBC interviewer. "We don't know what could have happened to those
students and, truthfully, neither does the BBC. It's absolutely disgraceful
that he (Sweeney) put students in that position. It's incredibly
reckless."
She said Sweeney was being "disingenuous"
by citing free-speech concerns as justification for putting students in danger. Read more…
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