BBC threatened with contempt for refusing papers regarding Princess Diana’s correspondence to Bashir following her Panorama interview

  • BBC failed to report information on a note that Princess Diana had written after Bashir interview. This was a violation of law
  • The Corporation was threatened with a charge of contempt of court and the prospect of a large fine
  • The ruling is another embarrassment for BBC director general Tim Davie as he attempts to rebuild reputation










The BBC broke the law by failing to disclose information about a note written by Princess Diana after her infamous interview with rogue reporter Martin Bashir, the Information Commissioner has ruled.

Corporation threatened with contempt of Court charges and large fines after it was found to have flouted Freedom of Information laws.

The ruling is another embarrassment for BBC director general Tim Davie as he attempts to rebuild the Corporation’s reputation in the wake of the Bashir scandal.

Earlier this year, Lord Dyson, a former Supreme Court judge, condemned the ‘deceitful behaviour’ deployed by Bashir to land his 1995 interview with Princess Diana and condemned the BBC for covering up what it knew about his conduct.

Pictured: Rogue reporter Martin Bashir interviews the Princess of Wales for the BBC's Panorama in 1995

Pictured: Martin Bashir, a rogue journalist interviewing the Princess of Wales on Panorama for BBC in 1995

Bashir made fake bank statements in order to get access to Princess, before telling her many lies and smears.

In December 1995, Diana sent the BBC a handwritten note, saying Bashir ‘did not show me any documents, nor give me any information that I was not previously aware of’. However, the handwritten note disappeared for 25 years before being found again last year.

In his report, Lord Dyson said that in 1996, a member of BBC management had told someone who has never been identified to guard the note ‘with his life’.

The note was returned to the owner by the person who took it home. However, the note’s location wasn’t reported in mainstream media until the beginning of November 2020.

The ruling is another embarrassment for BBC director general Tim Davie (pictured), 54, as he attempts to rebuild the Corporation’s reputation in the wake of the Bashir scandal.

The ruling is another embarrassment for BBC director general Tim Davie (pictured), 54, as he attempts to rebuild the Corporation’s reputation in the wake of the Bashir scandal.

In a bid to shed more light on the mystery, investigative journalist Andy Webb requested in September that, under the Freedom of Information Act, the BBC release ‘all documents’ related to Diana’s letter. Despite being legally obliged to do so, the Corporation did not respond.

Last Thursday, the Information Commissioner’s Office intervened and ruled that the BBC breached section 10 of the Act. It ordered the Corporation to issue a ‘substantive response’ to Mr Webb within 35 days, adding that failure to do so could see the Commissioner, Elizabeth Denham, inform the High Court and that the breach ‘may be dealt with as a contempt of court.’ The BBC released 119 pages of documents the following morning, most of which are press cuttings about the Bashir scandal and a small number of heavily redacted documents. The Corporation this weekend claimed it tried to send the information to Mr Webb on November 22 but he had not been able to receive it because of ‘technical difficulties’ with the Corporation’s FOI email account.

According to the documents, Bashir told BBC bosses last year that in 1995 he had been informed that the note would be stored in a safe. ‘My recollection is that I gave the letter to Steve Hewlett, then editor of Panorama, and he said that it would be stored in the “BBC safe”, which I assumed was in Television Centre,’ he said. ‘Unfortunately, I did not keep a copy – foolishly – and so don’t have it to hand.’

In another email, Fran Unsworth, the BBC’s director of news and current affairs, asked former BBC executive Anne Sloman whether she recalled seeing the Diana note. ‘The short answer is that I have no recollection of a handwritten letter from Diana,’ Ms Sloman replied.

Mr Webb said last night: ‘The BBC says it’s now transparent and accountable, yet here they are willing to actually break the law to avoid difficult questions.’

The BBC said: ‘A response was sent to Mr Webb on November 22, which he did not receive due to technical difficulties… He has now received it.’

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