January 31, 2004
BY BETH GARDINER ASSOCIATED PRESS
LONDON -- Thousands of British Broadcasting Corp. employees took out a full-page newspaper ad Saturday voicing support for the chief executive who resigned after a judge harshly criticized a BBC report alleging the government exaggerated evidence on Iraqi weapons.
The Daily Telegraph ad backing former BBC director general Greg Dyke came a day after the resignation of Andrew Gilligan, the correspondent who broadcast the radio piece that set off a bitter feud between the network and the government. Gilligan's was the third resignation prompted by the judicial report.
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On Friday, the journalist stood behind most of his story.
"The government did sex up the dossier, transforming possibilities and probabilities into certainties, removing vital caveats; the 45-minute claim was the 'classic example' of this; and many in the intelligence services, including the leading expert in WMD, were unhappy about it," he said.
more at
http://www.suntimes.com/output/iraq/britainadvisor31.html