Diana interview: Lord Hall resigns from National Gallery


Author
Front News Georgia
Ex-BBC director general Lord Hall has resigned as National Gallery chairman amid the outcry after an inquiry into Panorama's Princess Diana interview.
Lord Hall, who was director of news_copy when Martin Bashir used deception to get the 1995 scoop, said his continued presence would be a "distraction".
The inquiry described an internal probe led by Lord Hall in 1996 into what happened as "woefully ineffective".
Diana's brother Earl Spencer has asked the Met Police to investigate the BBC.
A spokesman for the force would not comment on whether Metropolitan Police Commissioner Cressida Dick had received a letter from Earl Spencer, who has alleged his sister was the victim of blackmail and fraud.
Earlier this week, the Met said it would assess the new report "to ensure there is no significant new evidence", after previously deciding against a criminal investigation.
The independent inquiry by former senior judge Lord Dyson found Bashir was unreliable and dishonest, and that the corporation fell short of its high standards when answering questions about the interview.
It also found that Bashir seriously breached BBC rules by mocking up faked documents, which he showed to Earl Spencer to obtain the interview.
Since the report was published on Thursday, the Duke of Cambridge has blamed BBC failings for fuelling his mother's paranoia and worsening his parents' relationship. The Duke of Sussex has also spoken about the hurt caused by the interview.
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