Emily Maitlis, a former BBC star, has criticised the BBC for how it has covered the claims against Huw Edwards.
On Wednesday, it was revealed that Edwards, who is 61 years old, is the reporter who has been banned because of accusations that an unnamed BBC star paid a young person more than £35,000 for sexually explicit photos.
Later, the Met police said that there is no proof that a crime was committed, and Edwards’s wife put out a statement on his behalf soon after.
Vicky Flind said that her husband had “major mental health problems” and that he was now getting care in a hospital where he would stay for the immediate future.
Tim Davie, the head of the BBC, said after the news broke that the investigation would “continue.” However, it has since been said that Newsnight writers, including Victoria Derbyshire, were already looking into Edwards’ behaviour before The Sun’s claims about the images scandal.
Speaking on The News Agents podcast, former Newsnight host Maitlis, who began by praising Flind’s ‘brave’ and ‘surprising’ statement, was left questioning journalism going ‘too far’.
She said: ‘When the story broke, there was an air of “something must be done”.
Jon Sopel, who has joined the likes of Dan Walker and Alistair Campbell in sharing support for Edwards after he was hospitalised, said: ‘The Sun said, we’re not going to publish anymore about the allegations about Huw Edwards in light of the fact he’s in hospital with mental health issues, yet the BBC is.
‘Senior managers in news, do they not have the duty of care and responsibility that Tim Davie is talking about, about this duty of care that we have, Huw is employed by BBC News.
‘So for the managers to say we’re interested in journalism, we’re not interested in the duty of care is just Alice in Wonderland.
‘It’s very difficult to make sense of.’
Emily added: ‘Whilst you never want journalists to stop doing their job, you are in a really weird place if the way that you raise your concern about a fellow presenter or colleague is not through a HR process, not through a complaints process, but by breaking a story about them because they’re famous.
‘And that’s the thing you can’t get away [from]. If that had been a manager, they would have just have had to go to HR but because they can get traction on a famous person – and to be honest we’ve all been at the centre of a media storm and having pictures splashed across the paper – it’s very easy for anyone to make anything into a story because you have a profile.
‘And I just wonder whether they would have broken that story if it hadn’t been that The Sun set the template.’
She went on: ‘BBC journalists like to think that they should be able to break a story that’s in their backyard.’
Sopel continued: ‘I suppose the thing that makes me uncomfortable is the idea that you see everything as a chance to get something on air that could get somebody down.
‘When if you see work in any kind of collegiate atmosphere, the more appropriate thing would be to say “this is out of order, you’ve got to reign it in,” or “look mate this is out of order I’m going to HR for what I’ve heard.”
‘But the idea of investigating it and putting it on air the night the person has gone into hospital, is the wrong side of the line.’
Sopel, who has held several roles in the past with the BBC, including being the broadcaster’s North America Editor, chief political correspondent of BBC News and working as a presenter on the BBC’s Politics Show, previously lashed out at the BBC’s coverage, saying: ‘This is an awful and shocking episode, where there was no criminality, but perhaps a complicated private life. That doesn’t feel very private now. I hope that will give some cause to reflect. They really need to. I wish @thehuwedwards well.’
Sopel sent out another tweet about Edwards’ name being discovered, this time criticising how the BBC covered the story.
‘Dear @BBCRadio4 @BBCNews, Well done on handling the breaking news about @thehuwedwards and the fact that he’s now being treated in hospital – but to then straight off back of that into a report on him facing fresh allegations of misconduct? That was just terrible,’ he stated.
The writer, who has worked with Edwards for more than 30 years, also talked to LBC.
Addressing Edwards’s mental health, Sopel said: ‘Huw has talked in the past about his depression. The Sun initially made some very serious allegations on the Saturday morning: that he might have solicited photos from someone who was underage and had therefore committed a criminal offence.’
He continued: ‘I would also say that I think that some of my colleagues in BBC News need to look at themselves because I think some of what was said, reported, and led on last night again showed that [Huw] had a slightly complicated personal life. It didn’t show criminality.’
Source My Celebrity Life.