The BBC’s boss has said there has been “no wholesale banning” of footage from the corporation’s archive after the scandal surrounding former newsreader Huw Edwards.
Edwards was named among the BBC’s highest-paid stars in the year 2023-24, despite being off-air since July 2023.
The 62-year-old is due to be sentenced next week after pleading guilty to three counts of making indecent images of children at a court hearing earlier this year.
In August, the BBC asked him to hand back the part of his salary, thought to be about £200,000, earned in the five months after he was first arrested.
Director general Tim Davie and BBC chair Dr Samir Shah faced questions from the Communications and Digital Committee.
Mr Davie said the “standard practice” was to pay suspended employees.
“This affair has not been easy for any of us at the BBC, and particularly for those people who’ve been impacted,” he said.
“But I think it’s absolutely right to look back and reflect and say what are the learnings here. This is standard practice but maybe we should be challenging that.”
A story first emerged in The Sun last year that a then unnamed BBC presenter had allegedly paid a young person for explicit photographs.
Days later, Edwards’ wife named him as the presenter at the centre of the allegations.
Mr Davie also said he did not think it “appropriate” to make public the BBC’s investigation into the initial allegations.
“If in the process of any disciplinary investigation, we found anything of a very serious nature, or criminal or anything of that type, we would of course refer it to the police and we’d be in a completely different situation,” he said.
“That is not what came through any of the work we did. We’ve clearly got things progressing outside the workplace, but we’re very clear with regard to where we are within the workplace.”
Source : Sky News