Journalists' walkout disrupts BBC

A strike by BBC journalists over jobs disrupted programmes including the flagship Today on Radio 4.

A man enters the BBC New Broadcasting House in London. Photograph: Reuters
A man enters the BBC New Broadcasting House in London. Photograph: Reuters

A strike by BBC journalists over jobs disrupted programmes including the flagship Today on Radio 4.

TV news was also hit by the 24-hour walkout by members of the National Union of Journalists in protest at compulsory redundancies.

Michelle Stanistreet, NUJ general secretary, led journalists out of the building at the BBC’s central London studios at midnight at the start of the walkout.

Picket lines were mounted outside BBC studios and offices across the UK and the union said the strike was being well supported.

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The Today programme was not broadcast at its usual time of 6am.

Ms Stanistreet, said: “NUJ members across the BBC are taking action to defend jobs and quality journalism at the corporation. They are angry and frustrated at the poor decisions being taken at the top of the BBC - decisions that are leading to journalists being forced out of their jobs and quality journalism and programming compromised.

“Instead of making sure that the redeployment process works properly in all areas of the BBC, managers are prepared to waste public money on needless redundancies and sacrifice

the livelihoods of experienced and talented journalists, at the same time as advertising other jobs externally.

“It’s particularly disappointing that the BBC has failed to engage meaningfully in attempts to resolve this dispute - an abdication of responsibility for a public service broadcaster.”

The NUJ said its members across the BBC - in Scotland, in BBC South, the Asian Network, Newsbeat, Five Live, the World Service and English Regions — were at risk of compulsory redundancy.

A BBC statement said: “We are disappointed that the NUJ has gone ahead with today’s strike and apologise to our audience for the disruption to services.

“Unfortunately industrial action does not alter the fact that the BBC has significant savings targets and as a consequence may have to make a number of compulsory redundancies.

“We have made considerable progress in reducing the need for compulsory redundancies through volunteers, redeployment and cancelling vacant positions and we will continue with these efforts.”