Tag: British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)

  • Eddie Butler: Former Wales rugby captain and renowned broadcaster passes away at age 65

    Former captain of the Wales rugby union and a renowned broadcaster and pundit, Eddie Butler passed away at the age of 65.

    Butler played 16 times for Wales between 1980 and 1984 after becoming well-known with the local team Pontypool. He captained the team six times and scored two tries.

    The British and Irish Lions team that toured New Zealand in 1983 called up the number eight.

    He rose to prominence as a rugby broadcaster after retiring.

    On a charitable excursion in Peru, Butler passed away in his sleep.

    He was a pivotal part of the Pontypool side that was created by Ray Prosser and dominated Welsh club rugby in the late 1970s and early 1980s, captaining the side between 1982 and 1985.

    Butler had also played for Cambridge University from 1976-1978 while studying French and Spanish at Fitzwilliam College.

    Butler’s first cap came in Wales’ 18-9 Five Nations win against France in January 1980.

    He retired from international rugby in 1985 aged 27 and has worked as a teacher in Cheltenham for three years, Butler then joined Radio Wales as a press and publicity officer in 1984.

    While still playing for his beloved Pontypool, Butler went on to work for a property development company.

    Eddie Butler played in three consecutive Varsity matches for Cambridge University against Oxford University – 1976-78

    He started his newspaper journalism career with the Sunday Correspondent in 1988 before stints with Observer and the Guardian and returned to BBC Wales in 1990 after being brought back in by the new head of sport Gareth Davies.

    Current BBC Director-General Tim Davie paid tribute to “a wonderful wordsmith” who had shaped so much of the organization’s output.

    “Everyone at the BBC is shocked and saddened by this very sad news,” Davie said. “Eddie was a brilliantly gifted commentator, writer, and reporter whose passion for the game of rugby union shone through every broadcast.

    “A wonderful wordsmith with a rich, iconic voice, he provided the definitive soundtrack to some of the greatest moments in rugby’s history. He will be much missed by all of us and our thoughts are with his family at this sad time.”

    Welsh Rugby Union chairman Rob Butcher said of Butler: “He proudly represented his country as a player, was a mainstay in press boxes around the world long after he retired from the game, and has been prolific in the way in which he has served Welsh rugby in both the written and spoken word over decades.

    “Our thoughts and prayers go to his family, who we also know well and cherish, and his close friends and colleagues at this incredibly difficult time.

    “He was a unique individual and the game in Wales owes him a debt of gratitude for his contributions both on and off the pitch.”

    Butler started his commentary career alongside the great Bill McLaren.

    After McLaren’s retirement, Butler became the BBC rugby lead commentator where he formed a notable partnership with the likes of former England hooker Brian Moore and ex-Wales fly-half Jonathan Davies.

    Butler will be remembered for his brilliant prose that accompanied montages of major sporting and political events, with the final one marking the death of Queen Elizabeth II.

    He also commentated on Olympic sports and the Invictus Games, as well as lending his voice to stirring montages for the BBC’s NFL highlights programmes.

    In 2010, Butler joined a host of former Wales captains who climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania to raise funds for Velindre Hospital, Cardiff’s specialist cancer treatment centre.

    Butler presented history series on the BBC including Wales and the History of the World, Hidden Histories, Welsh Towns at War in 2014, and two series of Welsh Towns in 2015.

    He was also an author after publishing three novels and two non-fiction books.

    Away from rugby and broadcasting, Butler campaigned for Welsh independence in recent years.

    His passing prompted tributes and condolences from inside and outside rugby union.

     

  • Freedom of speech flourished under Mahama – Bobie Ansah writes to BBC

    Kwabena Bobie Ansah, a journalist with Accra-based Accra FM, has written to the BBC over some claims by Elizabeth Akua Ohene, a former journalist and a Minister of State.

    According to him, the current President, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, made some baseless allegations about the then President, John Dramani Mahama, and nothing happened to him.

    “John Dramani Mahama, the former president of the Republic of Ghana, was a president under whom freedom of speech flourished. People could say anything and not get punished. The current president himself falsely accused President Mahama of spending $10 million on diaries, among other unfortunate attacks. This lie – among others – was exposed, and nothing happened to Akufo-Addo.

    “Despite getting away with false accusations, today, journalists are picked up gestapo style, while radio stations have been shut down because they are affiliated with the opposition party. I myself was picked up illegally and unlawfully detained earlier this year, and I have my own story to tell.

    “The biggest irony in this whole enterprise is that Akufo-Addo has said repeatedly that he prefers reckless journalism to empty bootlicking,” parts of Bobie Ansah’s letter read.

    Elizabeth Ohene, who worked with the BBC for fourteen years, had questioned why the media house would measure Ghana’s press freedom state with activist Oliver Barker-Vormawor’s brushes with the law as the metric.

    In her letter, she wrote that the BBC did a shoddy job by not probing the various aspects of the story and just relying on the fact that he was arrested for his activism.

    “We do not expect that the BBC would only defend journalists and programmes from other jurisdictions that meet its own standards.

    Bobie Ansah Open Letter to the BBC by The Independent Ghana on Scribd

    “But when the BBC starts a programme that purports to be about Ghana’s free speech being under attack, with a man whose claim to fame seems to be how scurrilous he can be about his opponents, who makes no attempt to be factual and who uses the most obscene language to describe Ghana’s First Lady at every opportunity, I have to wonder about the BBC.

    “Have the editors of the programme determined that this is a journalist, doing a professional job who is being muzzled and attacked?” she questioned.

    Kwabena Bobie Ansah was arrested on February 10, at 10 pm, right after his political talk show ended by persons purported to be National Security operatives.

    He was also accused of publishing false news on January 1, this year, accusing the presidential spouses of granting themselves “state lands at AU Village, around the Kotoka International Airport for the construction of Rebecca Foundation”.

    According to the police, the said presenter further called the First Lady, Rebecca Akufo-Addo, “a thief and that she has stolen state land around the Kotoka International Airport,” a statement he knew was “likely to occasion the breach of the peace”.

    However, he was granted a GH¢50,000 bail with two sureties on February 11.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com