Stars protest at closure of BBC Asian Network
LONDON, March 6, 2010; - Jay Sean, Shilpa Shetty and Amir Khan were
among a host of stars who urged the BBC on Sunday to drop plans to close
the Asian Network radio station.
Hip-hop artist Sean, Bollywood actress Shetty and world light
welterweight boxing champion Khan said a key outlet for South Asian
talent would be “tragically lost” if the station closed down.They were
among 158 public figures who made the plea in a joint letter to The
Guardian newspaper.
“We are writing to express our profound shock at the BBC director
general Mark Thompson’s proposals to close down the BBC Asian Network as
a national station,” the signatories said.
“The BBC we have grown up with has always prided itself on
celebrating diversity.
“In that respect the Asian Network is a national platform for
musicians, Asian culture in general, news, debate and documentaries.
“It provides a key platform for the national Asian community, and
offers an outlet to Asian talent, which is demonstrably underrepresented
in the more mainstream BBC. This would all be tragically lost if these
proposals are agreed.
“We urge the BBC Trust to reconsider this proposal and stop the
closure of a valued station which is greatly needed by your licence-fee-paying
audience nationally.“As loyal licence-fee payers, we trust we will not
be let down.” Other signatories included Lord Karan Bilimoria, the
founder and chairman of Cobra Beer; England one-day international
cricketer Vikram Solanki; “Bend It Like Beckham” film director Gurinder
Chadha; musicians Asian Dub Foundation, Jazzie B and Apache Indian;
comedians Sanjeev Bhaskar and Shazia Mirza; and writer Meera Syal.
Several parliamentarians, trade union leaders and musicians were also
among the signatories.
The British Broadcasting Corporation said Tuesday it would close the
Asian Network and 6 Music radio stations from next year and slash
spending on its online services.The shake-up came after criticism of its
market dominance.
The changes, in a report entitled “Putting Quality First” are to free
up an extra 600 million pounds (890 million dollars, 660 million euros)
to be spent on programme-making.
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