London, --The Society for the Protection of Unborn Children (SPUC) has accused the BBC of misleading reporting, hidden agendas, vested interests and an anti-life bias.
The accusations are in Bias and the BBC, SPUC's 30-page critique of "Sex and the Holy City", a Panorama programme which was broadcast on 12 October and subsequently repeated on BBC World television.
Soon after the broadcast, John Smeaton, SPUC's national director, complained about the programme to Mr Greg Dyke, the then BBC director general. Mr Fraser Steel, the BBC's head of programme complaints, replied this month and a response to that letter is in preparation.
Bias and the BBC is available to download as a PDF file below. SPUC plans to deliver a copy of Bias and the BBC to BBC headquarters in central London next week. We shall provide details as they become available. We shall also send the media copies of our response to Mr Steel.