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News |  18 Mar 2009 17:20 |  By RnMTeam

BBC journos to go on strike in April on offshoring issue

MUMBAI: Journalists from across all services of the BBC have resolved to hold two one-day strikes in April, prompted by plans to "offshore" operations for the BBC World Service's Hindi, Nepali, and Urdu programming to Delhi, Kathmandu, and Islamabad 

Reports in the Guardian say that TV, radio and online news will be disrupted on 3 April and 9 April, after nearly 800 members of the National Union of Journalists chapel at the BBC voted in favour of industrial action in a national ballot on Tuesday.

More than 1,100 of the union's nearly 4,000 members at the corporation took part in the vote, 77 per cent of whom voted in favour of a strike.

The most urgent threat of compulsory cuts is at the World Service's South Asian section, where up to 20 members are at risk, the union has said. Staff in Scotland are also understood to be under threat, the reports say.

NUJ general secretary, Jeremy Dear has been quoted as saying, "Journalists at the South Asian services have been fighting a heroic struggle against the outsourcing of their jobs ... now they have the weight of thousands of NUJ members at the BBC behind them."

In late February, journalists within the South Asia services held their own one-day strike to protest the proposed restructuring. In addition to worrying about lost jobs in London, the journalists fear that shifting operations to the subcontinent would compromise the quality and independence of the BBC's coverage.

Staff are concerned that moving production of these BBC language services abroad will result in poorer output and a loss of independence which is integral to the BBC World Service.

One member commented: If the BBC's succeeds in imposing change, the tendency will be for the output to become more and more India-centric, in the case of the India service, as they try to compete with local FM broadcasters.

This moves away from the World Service's USP: impartial news with a global perspective. Why should the British taxpayer end up paying for a local Indian radio station?...

The International Federation of Journalists has echoed these concerns, asserting that "the BBC management's off-shoring plans will put at risk seventy years of first-class journalism and expose their journalists to political and commercial pressures beyond their control."

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