Culture Secretary Lisa Nandi has questioned why no one was taken out in the BBC on his decision to broadcast the Gaza documentary who depicted the son of an officer of Hamas.
It comes before a review of being published in Gaza: How to Survive a war zone, which was drawn from the iPlayer in February.
In an interview with Times, Nandi said that “people should be accountable to the decisions that were taken” and was “exaggerated” by time to complete the review.
A BBC spokesperson said on Saturday that the conclusions of the review would be published “as soon as possible”, but should “fully and follow a proper procedure”.
in February BBC apologizes on “serious flaws” In the creation of the program about the lives of children in Gaza, it was revealed that his 13 -year -old narrator was the son of a Hamas minister.
The review is being led by Peter Johnson, who is the director of BBC editorial complaints and reviews, independent of BBC News and reports directly to Director General Tim Devi.
It is expected to determine whether any editorial guidelines were broken and if any disciplinary action is required.
The BBC will also do the full audit of the expenditure on the program.
Nandi said that whatever had happened, he needed “adequate clarification” about what he had not yet done to Sameer Shah, president of Davi or BBC.
If anyone was fired on the incident, Nandi said that she wanted “why not as an explanation”.
A BBC spokesperson said: “The findings of the review will be published as soon as possible.
“As we have said earlier, it is important that this work is done as soon as possible, but it should also be fully done and a proper procedure should be followed.”
Last month, BBC decided not to broadcast A separate documentary from another independent production company It was around production due to fairness concerns about doctors working in Gaza. It was later broadcast on Channel 4.
Nandi said that the BBC leadership “had to get a grip on it” Live Glstonbury Broadcast Broadcast of Punk-Doo Bob Bob Valn.