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BBC apologizes; Beckingham says RP-UK "relationship never been stronger"
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Oct 24, 2008 - 5:22:39 AM

By Gloria Jane Baylon

MANILA, Oct. 24 (PNA) — The British community in the Philippines and their Filipino friends who are now in the middle of celebrations of “RP-UK Week,” have more reasons to be festive.

Not only has the venerable broadcasting icon, the BBC, apologized for a recent anti-Filipino program, but British ambassador to Manila, Peter Beckingham, also reiterates that the "relationship has never been stronger, and the prospects are excellent.”

Four weeks after it aired on two channels on September 26 and 29, the British Broadcasting Corporation apologized for the cultural faux pas on the offending comedy, “Harry and Paul.”

“Please accept my sincere apologies, on behalf of the BBC, for the offence that this programme caused you," BBC director-general Mark Thompson wrote Ambassador to London, Edgardo Espiritu, in a letter dated October 10.

The London embassy claims it received BBC’s letter only on October 20.

Producer Andew Zane, chief executive of Tiger Aspect Productions, a BBC associate, also personally apologized to Filipinos who joined a vigil in London in protest of the program.

"We're sorry to anyone who was in any way offended by the programme. This certainly was not our intention," Zane told the Filipinos.

The episode was described by the Philippine Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) as “an insulting reference to Filipino women, typifying them in a dual role as domestic workers and sex toys of their British employers.”

Filipinos who had monitored it immediately lodged a complaint through Espiritu, who then wrote BBC Trust Chairman, Sir Michael Lyons, on October 3.

In Manila, Foreign Affairs Secretary Alberto Romulo summoned British ambassador Peter Beckingham to the DFA, the envoy expressing “regrets” over the incident.

Beckingham explained to reporters that BBC is not government-owned nor controlled, and cannot be forced by the British foreign office to apologize but that they will convey the Philippine demand for apology.

The pressure of the Philippine campaign in Manila and in London — vigil and silent protest, online signature gathering, and letter-writing -- apparently bore down on its target, and the apologies came in.

More than 2,000 signatures protesting the offensive depiction of Filipinos were gathered on the internet set up by leaders of the 200,000-strong Filipino community in the United Kingdom.

A silent vigil was also held simultaneously on October 17 in front of the BBC Office in White City, just outside central London, and Tiger Aspect Productions in Soho in central London, the DFA reported.

Espiritu also wrote letters to the All Party Parliamentary Group–Philippines and the UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office, the UK Equality and Human Rights Commission, the Office of Communications (OFCOM|), the UK Press Complaints Commission London Mayor Boris Johnson, and Harriet Harman, MP, UK Secretary of State for Women and Equality.

”All’s well that ends well,” said former finance secretary Roberto Ocampo, an alumnus of the London School of Economics and now the chairman of the British Alumni Association, which spearheads the ongoing Philippine-British celebrations.

But a member of the Association, who did not wish to stoke the heat of resentment, also noted that ”perhaps, despite our claims, our English (language) ability is not that good. There are those who think it was a literary problem.”

”It (the TV incident) was an eye-opener…we should improve our knowledge, practice and embrace of English…and think globally,” the alumnus said. (PNA)



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