BBC says omission of Jadhav\'s mention from Pak minister interview \'not an act of censorship\'

BBC says omission of Jadhav's mention from Pak minister interview 'not an act of censorship'

Press Trust of India  |  Islamabad 

British has defended the omission of Indian death row convict Kulbhushan Jadhav's mention from its interview with Pakistan's Asad Umar, saying it was "not an act of censorship".

The TV version of the interview, however, did not contain his mention of Jadhav, who was sentenced to death in 2017 by a Pakistani military tribunal on spying charges.

Human Rights criticised the for deleting the part about Jadhav, terming it "typical bias" on the part of the broadcaster.

"Shameful how censored and chopped off Asad's mention of Indian spymaster Jhadav! Typical bias of BBC!," she tweeted.

BBC 'Hardtalk' on Twitter, however, clarified that Jadhav's name had been omitted from the TV version of the interview and not the radio version, and that it was not done to censor the minister's words.

"The reason Kulbhushan Jadhav's name was deleted from the TV version of the HARDtalk interview with Asad has a simple technical explanation. The recorded interview was too long for our broadcast slot and so had to be edited. This was done separately for radio and TV," it tweeted.

"His name was omitted from the TV version. This was not an act of censorship, but clearly confusion has been caused, so we are happy to restore that short section to the TV broadcast and we'll give the new programme an extra airing tonight as well as tomorrow morning," the broadcaster said.

On BBC's clarifictaion, the said, "As pathetic an explanation as any! BBC's bias has always been there and then there are mega bucks to be earned from India!"

alleges that its security forces arrested Jadhav from province in March 2016 after he reportedly entered the country from

denies all the charges and maintains that Jadhav was kidnapped from where he had business interests after retiring from the and that he has no links with the government.

After Jadhav was sentenced to death, moved the against the verdict in May 2017. The has halted Jadhav's execution on India's appeal pending the final verdict by it.

In October, the ICJ said it will hold hearings from February 18 to February 21 in the at in the Netherlands, the seat of the court.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, December 14 2018. 13:40 IST