Tim Davi and other BBC officials have demanded a meeting on the broadcast of a Gaza documentary in front by a son of Hamas.
Mr. Davi will preside over the crisis talks with other officials, to discuss why the corporation decided to broadcast the controversial documentary, which has been branded by critics.
On Friday, Broadcaster removed Gaza: How to make Warzone alive from BBC IPLARER, already apologized for his failure to disclose the links of child storytellers to the Hamas-Run government.
BBC president Mr. Davi and Sameer Shah have demanded an explanation for Fiasco amid the increasing allegations of BBC bias to both.
A source close to the board told Sunday Times: “The BBC is currently working on the documentary and the board would like to complete the result of that work once.”
He continued: “The board has a scheduled meeting later this week where the matter is on the agenda.”
The documentary, which was originally aired on Monday evening and was scheduled to show again two days later, provided an account of conflict through the eyes of three ordinary Palestinian children.
The corporation later released an apology on Wednesday night, after emerging as a central person and narrator, the then 13-year-old Abdullah al-Yazori, the son of Agriculture in Hamas, was the son of Ayman Al-Yazori. Government.
After the emergence of Abdullah al -Azori’s father, the corporation apologized on Wednesday night.
After this it was revealed that one of the three children, who is the central hero of the film, was the daughter of a former captain in the Hamas-Interested Police Force, while the third was photographed while posing with Hamas fighters.
The BBC stated that the connections were not “informed” by the manufacturers of the documentary before the broadcast.
Following the growing criticism, the corporation added a disclaimer to the film, accepting Abdullah’s family link to Hamas, but the documentary manufacturers continued to emphasize “full editorial control”.
As further revelations about other children, critics demanded it to be fully drawn from the BBC program.
Dozens of major media and broadcasting data signed an open letter to the Director General of BBC and urged them to withdraw the documentary.
On Thursday, Culture Secretary, Lisa Nandi said that he would immediately discuss with the broadcaster on the documentary to emphasize the importance of “being correct”.
The BBC eventually pulled the program and said it was “conducting more hard work with the production company”.