Please wait
Home » BBC » Peter Drew's full complaint Full details of the BBC complaint from Peter DrewAfter watching the two BBC documentaries '9/11 Ten Years On' and '9/11: Conspiracy Road Trip' in September 2011, Peter Drew decided that what the BBC was showing to the public with those two documentaries was so clearly inaccurate and biased towards supporting the official story of 9/11 and smearing the legitimate questions asked by the 9/11 truth movement, that he decided to challenge the documentaries through the BBC's formal complaints processes which is in place to ensure that the BBC adheres to its 'Royal Charter' and 'Agreement' with the British public. This requires the BBC to present important items of news in a manner that is factually accurate, impartial, and fair. Peter Drew is a member of the 'volunteer team' for the US based organisation 'Architects and Engineers for 9/11 Truth' (AE911truth), an organisation which includes 1,700 professional architects and engineers as well as 14,000 other individuals, who all question the official version of events for the collapse of the three towers on 9/11 and who are calling for a new and independent investigation. As such, through this organisation there was abundant scientific and professional evidence available which could prove that what the BBC was telling the public in those two documentaries was at best extremely misleading and inaccurate, and at worst was part of an intentional and wilful cover up of one of the biggest crimes in history. The main elements of Mr Drew's complaint surround the following issues:
These are the three main areas of focus of Mr Drew's complaint and all the details are shown within the various communications below. Index of complaint correspondence
22/08/2011 - Reply email from the BBC Trust UnitRef: 930001 Dear Mr Drew Thank you for your email to the BBC Trust. I am responding as a member of the Trust Unit which supports and advises the Chairman and Trustees. I note your concerns about the BBC’s coverage of 9/11. I should explain that the role of the BBC Trust as set out in the BBC’s Royal Charter is distinct from that of the BBC’s management. The Trust’s role is to set the overall framework, the BBC’s Editorial Guidelines, which set out the values and standards that all BBC output should meet. Responsibility for the BBC’s editorial content, within these guidelines, rests ultimately with the Director-General, as Editor-in-Chief. There is a BBC complaints process in place to deal with instances where audiences feel that there has been a breach of these Guidelines. This requires that complaints must be dealt with in the first instance by the BBC Executive. I am therefore forwarding your email to BBC Audience Services so that they can respond on behalf of the BBC Executive to the concerns you raise. Full details of the complaints process are available on the BBC’s complaints website: www.bbc.co.uk/complaints. This includes information on, and the criteria for, escalating complaints if unhappy with the BBC’s initial response. Yours sincerely BBC Trust Unit
|