BBC to cut hundreds of World Service jobs

30 Sep 2022 10:16am
BBC head office in London, UK - 123RF
BBC head office in London, UK - 123RF
LONDON - The BBC announces Thursday that it will cut 382 jobs as part of wider staff reductions to BBC World Service.

"High inflation, soaring costs and a cash-flat licence fee settlement have led to tough choices across the BBC and the BBC’s international services need to make a saving of £28.5 million (US$32.4 million) as part of the wider £500 million of annual savings and reinvestment to make the BBC digital-led,” Anadolu Agency quoted the company as saying in a statement.

Broadcast services in Chinese and Urdu will see cuts while language-specific services in Gujarati, Igbo, Indonesian, Pidgin and Yoruba will be moved to an online-only format.

Cheaper online content will replace more expensive radio and television services in Arabic, Turkish, Persian, Azerbaijani, Vietnamese, Russian, Thai and others.

The BBC will also stop radio services entirely in Arabic, Persian, Hindi, Chinese, Kyrgyz and Urdu among other languages.

World Service English will continue to operate 24-hour broadcast radio globally.

Some services will be relocated from London with the Thai service going to Bangkok, Korean to Seoul and Bangla to Dhaka.

"There is a compelling case for expanding our digital services across the World Service in order to better serve and connect with our audiences,” said BBC World Service Director Liliane Lando.

Philippa Childs of the Bectu broadcasting union said while the union recognised that the BBC must adapt to meet the challenges of a changing media landscape, "once again it is workers who are hit by the government’s poorly-judged political decisions - its freezing of the license fee and the resulting funding challenges has necessitated these proposals.”

Childs noted the potential ramifications for the BBC’s reputation globally. - BERNAMA

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