BBC complains to UN about Iran’s harassment of journalists

BBC Persian service presenter Fardad Farahzad gets ready to present the news, at the corporation's London headquarters. (AP/File Photo)
Short Url
Updated 10 February 2022
Follow

BBC complains to UN about Iran’s harassment of journalists

  • ‘There have been escalating actions and threats … It must stop’
  • This is the third such complaint in 5 years

LONDON: The BBC has filed an urgent complaint to the UN against Iran’s government over “escalating actions and threats” toward its journalists at its Persian service and their families.

The broadcaster said Tehran has been targeting UK-based BBC News Persian journalists and their families in Iran for more than a decade, but there has been a “concerning increase in harassment and security risk” over the past year.

“There have been escalating actions and threats, including an asset freeze which penalises the journalists and their families, online harassment, gendered attacks on women journalists and death threats. It must stop,” said Liliane Landor, senior controller of BBC International News and director of the World Service.

She urged the UN “to continue to condemn Iran for their unacceptable treatment of our BBC News Persian colleagues.”

BBC News Persian journalists say in the past year, they have faced increased security concerns for themselves while their families in Iran have been harassed more often.

Despite being banned in Iran, BBC News Persian reaches a weekly global audience of almost 22 million people, including around 13 million in the country. 

This is the third complaint in five years filed by the BBC to the UN against Iran’s government. The first was in October 2017, and the second in December 2019.

Iran ranked 174 out of 180 countries in the 2021 World Press Freedom Index.


Eurovision Sport, Camb.ai to provide live subtitling for Paralympic Winter Games

Updated 06 March 2026
Follow

Eurovision Sport, Camb.ai to provide live subtitling for Paralympic Winter Games

  • Partnership aims to increase accessibility for all audiences
  • Milano Cortina Games run from Friday to March 15

LONDON: Eurovision Sport, the European Broadcasting Union’s free-to-air streaming platform, will provide live and on-demand subtitling for coverage of the Milano Cortina 2026 Paralympic Winter Games in partnership with AI language company Camb.ai

The service will run across all competition days, allowing viewers to stream all six Paralympic Winter Games sports on Eurovision Sport with real-time subtitles. The Games open on Friday and run through March 15.

Camb.ai will supply contextual speech-to-text transcription for both live and catch-up coverage, which the organizers said would support accessibility without altering the editorial integrity of broadcasts.

Eurovision Sport Managing Director Alan Fagan said the aim was to make the Games available to “the widest possible audience,” by scaling up digital accessibility across every event on the platform.

The initiative forms part of the EBU’s most extensive digital coverage of a Paralympic Winter Games to date and complements member broadcasters’ linear output.

It also reflects a wider industry push to make live sport easier to follow for viewers watching without sound, people with hearing impairments and audiences consuming content on demand.

Camb.ai’s Chief Technology Officer Akshat Prakash said the company was proud to deepen its partnership with Eurovision Sport, describing the platform as a leader in applying new technology to sports coverage.

The two organizations began working together in 2024, when they delivered what they described as Europe’s first AI-powered real-time translated sports commentary during European Athletics events.