• Wednesday, February 28, 2024

UK News

BBC can’t prosecute viewers for failing to pay licence fee: Culture secretary

LONDON, ENGLAND – JANUARY 23: Lucy Frazer, Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, and Member of Parliament for South East Cambridgeshire, leaves after attending the weekly Cabinet meeting on January 23, 2024 in London, England. Usually held in the Cabinet Room of 10, Downing Street, the Cabinet of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland is the senior decision-making body of the government of King Charles III. It is chaired by the Prime Minister and members include Secretaries of State and other senior ministers. Members of the Cabinet are appointed by the Prime Minister and are chosen from members of the two houses of Parliament, the House of Commons and the House of Lords. The current Cabinet system was set up by Prime Minister David Lloyd George during his six-year tenure from 1916. (Photo by Carl Court/Getty Images)

By: Eastern Eye

THE BBC should not be able to pursue criminal prosecutions against viewers for not paying the TV licence fee, culture secretary Lucy Frazer said, adding that an examination of the broadcaster’s powers would be in its next charter review.

Convictions for not paying the licence fee are in the spotlight after Britain’s Post Office used its own powers to wrongly convict hundreds of its branch managers for false accounting, fraud and theft since the turn of the century.

“I don’t think it’s appropriate for the BBC to have criminal tools in its armoury in relation to prosecutions,” Frazer told Times Radio on Monday (22). “I think that there are issues in relation to criminal prosecutions, especially for those people who are the most vulnerable.”

The TV licence, which funds the national broadcaster, is set to rise by £10.50 in April to £169.50 a year. In December, Frazer said her department would review the BBC’s long-term funding options, including how it could increase its commercial income.

Frazer also said on Monday she was extending the remit of regulator Ofcom to cover the BBC’s news website as part of a mid-term review of its charter, which expires at the end of 2027.

In a written statement to parliament, she said audiences were increasingly consuming content online, and they expected the same standards of impartiality across the BBC’s television, radio and online services.

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