By Democrat reporter
The Mail Online is reporting that the BBC has axed editorial director Kamal Ahmed and two others from its news board in a ‘modernisation’ plan – leaving it with no ethnic minority members despite a pledge to increase senior management diversity last year.
An £80 million savings plan saw the job cuts announced by the broadcaster this afternoon, the ‘restructuring’ as part of ‘plans to modernise BBC News’.
The slimmed-down board will remain headed by director of news and current affairs Fran Unsworth, who earns £340,000-a-year.
Two other members of the board, Gavin Allen and Jo Carr, have also lost their jobs after the restructuring.
In 2019, the corporation said all senior leadership groups should have at least two staff members from minority ethnic backgrounds.
However, Ahmed’s departure will mean that the BBC News board is now all-white.
Former Dumbarton Lennox Herald reporter Ahmed’s role was created by Unsworth in 2018 and she said she was ‘thrilled he was joining her top team’.
However, the pair are said to have had differences of opinion over the department’s editorial direction, leading to his removal.
A BBC insider told MailOnline: ‘No one working here was very surprised. Most people think he had it coming.
‘Kamal had gone to Tony Hall (previous director-general) arguing that we needed this editorial director role, and Tony created it for him. But most people think it was a non-job. He and Fran (Unsworth) did not get on.
‘People didn’t like him. They didn’t understand how he was elevated so quickly, and many didn’t forgive him for that speech he got paid for to a hedge fund while lots of job losses were being announced here.’
Ahmed had a role as editorial director and oversaw Question Time for his £205,000 salary
Reacting to the change, one BBC source told the Telegraph: ‘And just like that our news board is all-white again. Not the direction I and many others hoped we would be going in.’
On Wednesday night, an email signed by dozens of BBC staff is believed to have been sent to Mr Davie protesting Ahmed’s removal.
Tufayel Ahmed, a journalist and lecturer, said: ‘Not even two years ago the BBC made a big fuss about being more inclusive and ‘stepping up’ by having BAME representation in every leadership team, and now it seems to be back-pedalling on its own promises.
‘The BBC’s decision to cut its only BAME news board member is particularly worrying because BAME people are being disproportionately affected by job cuts during the pandemic for no discernible reason.
However, a BBC spokeswoman said: ‘The final membership of the BBC News Board has not been announced. Two out the eight posts – a quarter – are currently vacant.’
In June last year the BBC said it would increase diversity by investing £100 million over three years.
The move, which starts in April 2021 is targeting 20% of off-screen talent coming from under-represented groups.
Within that includes people with a disability or from a BAME or ‘disadvantaged socio-economic’ background.
It had already pledged to increase the proportion of leadership roles filled by women from 44% to 50% by next year, and raise the share of such senior roles held by BAME staff from 11.5% to 15%.
Tim Davie, the director-general, said on taking the job that diversity was ‘mission critical’ to the BBC.
Ahmed, whose mother is from Rotherham and whose father is from Sudan, had a role as editorial director which included overseeing Question Time and was paid around £205,000. He joined the BBC in 2014.
He found himself challenged in February last year when Victoria Derbyshire told him to ‘reconsider the decision to close our programme’.
It came after he had shared a post about a probe by Newsnight that had resulted in the Government announcing measures to ban putting children under the age of 16 in unregulated accommodation.
Ahmed wrote: ‘Investigations matter. Original journalism matters.’
Derbyshire made her feelings known about her programme’s cancellation, and has condemned the BBC’s claims that it pulled the show off air because it had failed to grow its live audience.
As well as Ahmed, Gavin Allen’s £180,000 role as head of news output, overseeing the likes of Radio 4’s Today programme, News at Six and Ten and the now-axed Victoria Derbyshire show, will also be closed.
The post of Joanna Carr, who as head of BBC current affairs looked after Panorama and Newsnight and is paid around £165,000, will also go.
In a note to staff, Unsworth said she would ‘like to thank them for their outstanding contribution to BBC News to date and we are exploring future options for them’.
Gavin Allen’s £180,000 role as head of news output has also been closed as part of the cuts
Unsworth said the new board will help in ‘increasing the impact of our world-class journalism, addressing changes in the way audiences consume news, achieving our savings target, and building a diverse culture inclusive of all.’
It comes after the BBC announced cuts to Newsnight, 5 Live and other news output as part of cost-cutting plans and an effort to reach the young.
The plans to ‘modernise its newsroom’ will lead to around 450 job cuts and includes a review of the number of BBC presenters ‘and how they work’.
The board will be whittled down from 11 to eight, as there will be three new roles.
Jamie Angus, currently director of the World Service Group, will become senior controller, news output and commissioning.
Jonathan Munro, who is head of newsgathering, will become senior controller, news content and deputy director of news, ‘responsible for the production of the journalism that supports the BBC’s news programmes and platforms.’
The changes to the board will come into effect in March.
Ahmed previously hit the headlines last February when he apologised for accepting a £12,000 payment for speaking at a banker’s conference.
He received £12,000 for a 40-minute appearance at the Aberdeen Standard Investment’s conference, just days after telling 450 of his colleagues that their jobs were being cut.
He came under fire both publicly and within the BBC for his £12,000 fee for the event and has sent an email to colleagues apologising.
In the email, he wrote: ‘I realise now that I did not think things through sufficiently at the time of the booking and, although I did not break any of the BBC’s guidelines on external speaking, it was a mistake to agree to a fee.

BBC executives Gavin Allen (left), Naja Nielsen (second from left), Jonathan Munro (second from right) and Kamal Ahmed (right) sat in front of staff on barstools at New Broadcasting House as they cut 450 jobs last year.
Days before, Ahmed was one of four senior BBC bosses who sat on bar stools as they announced the job cuts.
He drew criticism after he turned up for the ‘bloodbath’ announcement wearing a black T-shirt and casual trousers.
This was reportedly out of character for the man who as political editor of the Observer was regarded as the faithful Fleet Street mouthpiece of Tony Blair’s spin doctor Alastair Campbell.
BBC broadcaster Victoria Fritz tweeted: ‘Got to be the first time I’ve not seen Kamal in a sharp suit and tie. At least he wore black.’
The BBC is a soft power tool for NATO/HEAD CHOPPER command and control. They toe the Gov’s imperialist warmongering line. According to Brown Uni/US research, 59+ million have been displaced across N Africa and the Middle East since 9/11. That’s over and above the 10s of millions killed, maimed, raped and robbed. Cost to the US alone $8 trillion approx. If there is a God looking over you and yours, Bill, you don’t give a shit. Your deeds betray the lies spouting out of your mouths. All of this liberal “caring humanitarian” crap and “Freedom, Democracy and Human Rights” garbage is working the Oracle. All the mugs are queuing up to buy that. And, all the SNP have to do is dress this carnage up in a kilt and wheel out the haggis and all the IndyRef numbskulls are left crying for more. More atrocities on an industrial scale and 10+ years of horrific barbarism in Syria…..and you haven’t even got a single parking ticket to pin on Assad. But that is all it takes to get you lot going. MSM reports “Bad Guy” and you lot have got your fingers itching on the trigger. Who knows how many 10s of millions you got killed, because you won’t know when you are being lied to. Were you planning on a BBC Governor’s job yourself, eh! Bill? I wouldn’t trust them to tell me the sky was blue and the grass was green.
Ah, James. It’s the way you tell them. Governor’s job? I’m starting with the bins on Monday.