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Ex-BBC chief Mark Thompson to be quizzed on pay-offs | Ex-BBC chief Mark Thompson to be quizzed on pay-offs |
(35 minutes later) | |
Former BBC director general Mark Thompson will face MPs later, after accusing the trust which oversees the corporation of "fundamentally misleading" Parliament over pay-offs. | Former BBC director general Mark Thompson will face MPs later, after accusing the trust which oversees the corporation of "fundamentally misleading" Parliament over pay-offs. |
The BBC Trust says the claims are bizarre and denies MPs were misled. | The BBC Trust says the claims are bizarre and denies MPs were misled. |
Mr Thompson is one of seven senior BBC figures being questioned over the size of severance deals at the corporation. | Mr Thompson is one of seven senior BBC figures being questioned over the size of severance deals at the corporation. |
The BBC has been criticised for paying £25m to 150 outgoing executives - £2m more than their contracts necessitated. | |
BBC Trust chairman Lord Patten and the BBC head of human resources Lucy Adams will also appear before the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) on Monday. | |
Last week, Ms Adams said she made a mistake when she told MPs in an earlier hearing she did not know about an email concerning pay-offs to top executives. | |
'Shocked' | |
They will be joined by BBC trustee Anthony Fry, former trust chairman Sir Michael Lyons, trust director Nicholas Kroll and a former senior independent director, Marcus Agius. | They will be joined by BBC trustee Anthony Fry, former trust chairman Sir Michael Lyons, trust director Nicholas Kroll and a former senior independent director, Marcus Agius. |
The hearing is a follow-up to a similar hearing in July which saw Lord Patten tell MPs he was "shocked and dismayed" by pay-offs totalling £25m to senior managers made between 2009 and 2012. | The hearing is a follow-up to a similar hearing in July which saw Lord Patten tell MPs he was "shocked and dismayed" by pay-offs totalling £25m to senior managers made between 2009 and 2012. |
He said that if Mr Thompson was called before MPs, he would be "as interested as you are, why we didn't know" about the payments. | |
Mr Thompson - who left the BBC last year and is now chief executive of the New York Times newspaper - did not give evidence at that hearing. | |
But later, at central London's Portcullis House, he will be expected to answer allegations made in July that he had not been open with the trust about pay-offs to two senior executives - former deputy director-general Mark Byford and former marketing chief Sharon Baylay. | |
Ahead of the hearing, Mr Thompson sent a letter to the PAC, saying statements by Lord Patten were inaccurate and the trust chairman had been "fully briefed" about the two settlements. | |
He also said he had emails which showed that trust members approved the payments. | He also said he had emails which showed that trust members approved the payments. |
Mr Thompson's 13,000-word document included a briefing note prepared for Lord Patten on defending the size of the payments. | |
Another attachment challenged Ms Adams' claim that she did not know of an email explaining the pay-offs, and appeared to show that she helped to compose it. | |
It has emerged Ms Adams had earlier admitted she made a mistake in her evidence to MPs and had not recognised the email from its description. | |
The BBC Trust said it rejected the suggestion that Lord Patten and Anthony Fry misled the PAC. | The BBC Trust said it rejected the suggestion that Lord Patten and Anthony Fry misled the PAC. |
It also denied Mr Thompson's claim it approved a £949,000 severance package for Mr Byford and said it had been "assured that the package was within contractual terms". | |
Speaking on Friday morning, Lord Patten said he had "no concerns at all" about the statements made by Mr Thompson and was "looking forward" to appearing before the committee. | Speaking on Friday morning, Lord Patten said he had "no concerns at all" about the statements made by Mr Thompson and was "looking forward" to appearing before the committee. |
The biggest severance payments included: | The biggest severance payments included: |
The PAC meeting in July followed the publication of a report in which the National Audit Office criticised the corporation, saying the scale of the payments risked public trust. |