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Griffin to complain over BBC 'bias'
23 January 2009
Mr Griffin claims the format of the current affairs programme had been deliberately "twisted" in order to focus on him and his party's policies, leaving him to face a "lynch mob".
He further stoked controversy by claiming that London, where the show was filmed, was "no longer British" having been "ethnically cleansed" of "English and British people".
More than 8 million viewers - around three times the normal total and more than half the total audience share - watched Thursday night's show. The BBC said it had received around 350 complaints from viewers, with 240 alleging bias against Mr Griffin and the BNP and more that 100 saying that he should not have been invited onto the programme.
During the debate programme, Mr Griffin, who was making his first appearance, was repeatedly jeered as he claimed Islam was incompatible with being British, the Ku Klux Klan was "almost totally non-violent" and gays were "creepy".
At a news conference in Grays, Essex, he said the format had been biased against him and demanded a second chance to appear to discuss the broader issues of the day. He said he would be making a formal complaint.
"The British public are aghast at the display of bias from the BBC, the venom from the political class, and the sheer unfairness. That was not a genuine Question Time, that was a lynch mob," he said. "People wanted to see me and hear me talking about things such as the postal strike. One or two questions about what a wicked man I am, fair enough, but the whole programme - it was absurd."
The BNP leader also railed against the decision to film the programme in London. "That audience was taken from a city that is no longer British," he said. "That was not my country any more. Why not come down and do it in Thurrock, do it in Stoke, do it in Burnley? Do it somewhere where there are still significant numbers of English and British people and they haven't been ethnically cleansed from their own country."
London Mayor Boris Johnson retorted that Mr Griffin was right to say that the capital was not his city. "London is a welcoming, tolerant, cosmopolitan capital which thrives on its diversity. The BNP has no place here and I again urge Londoners to reject their narrow, extremist and offensive views at every possibility," he said.
The BBC also dismissed the BNP leader's complaints of bias. A spokesman said: "The questions on the programme always come from the audience which reflects a range of views and backgrounds across the political spectrum wherever the programme is filmed across the country. The programme is topical and it is normal for it to reflect topics that are in the news in the week - people would accept that the BNP and Question Time have been prominent topics this week."
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