Veteran journalist Martin Bashir is ‘seriously unwell’ with coronavirus-related complications, the BBC has said.
Corporation chiefs confirmed the 57-year-old who works as the news channel’s religion editor is very ill after recently contracting virus.
News of Bashir’s ill health comes ahead of the 25th anniversary of his famous interview with Diana, Princess of Wales, for Panorama in 1995, as well as a Channel 4 documentary about it.
A spokeswoman for the BBC said: ‘We are sorry to say that Martin is seriously unwell with Covid-19 related complications.
Veteran journalist Martin Bashir is ‘seriously unwell’ with coronavirus-related complications, the BBC has said
‘Everyone at the BBC is wishing him a full recovery.
‘We’d ask that his privacy, and that of his family, is respected at this time.’
His colleague Simon McCoy sent a message of support on hearing the news: ‘Wishing you well – and thinking of you.’
Britain today recorded 26,688 more Covid-19 cases and 191 deaths, wit the number of daily infections rising by a third in a week.
News of Bashir’s illness comes amid renewed interest in his career-making 1995 Panorama interview with Princess Diana
It is not known when Bashir contracted the virus, with the BBC only confirming that he was ‘seriously unwell’ tonight
Bashir began working as a journalist in 1986 but made headlines around the world in 1995 for his BBC interview with Diana, Princess of Wales for Panorama.
The controversial interview has seen renewed interest this month ahead of a new Channel 4 film examines the circumstances behind the meeting, which aired tonight.
Diana: The Truth Behind the Interview, which marks the broadcast’s 25th anniversary, raises questions on the ethics of the tell-all chat.
The documentary alleges the reason the princess decided to take the BBC interview was because her brother, Earl Spencer, was shown forged bank statements created by someone working for the BBC.
The documents showed payments worth £10,500 from two companies, one of which was News International, and the other was from a company with an invented name.
Earl Spencer is said to have been so impressed by Bashir that he duly arranged for him to meet Diana.
The graphic designer who says he mocked up the false documents even explained on the documentary how he did it.
Diana’s biographer Andrew Morton claimed: ‘Speaking to those in Diana’s circle at that time, you could get a sense why those bank statements were a tipping point that made her mind up to sit down and speak about her life.’
The BBC made a statement which acknowledged the document was shown to Earl Spencer, but said it had a letter from Diana confirming this did not mislead her into taking the interview.
But in 2007, it was claimed this letter either did not exist or had been list, which Morton casts doubt upon.
‘If they received a letter basically saying the Princess of Wales, herself, was very happy about the way the programme was made, that would bomb-proof them against any future concerns,’ he said.
A handwritten note from Princess Diana attested to the fact the Princess had not seen the ‘mocked-up’ bank statements and that they played no part in her decision to give the interview.
The documentary alleges the reason she decided to take the BBC interview was because her brother, Earl Spencer, was shown forged bank statements created by someone working for the BBC
It is reported that the late royal ‘did not regret the interview’ about her marriage to Prince Charles because she ‘wanted the world to see who she really was’
The broadcast attracted 23million viewers and launched Bashir’s career in journalism.
Bashir’s other high-profile interviews have included the suspects in the Stephen Lawrence murder case, entertainer Michael Barrymore, Jeffrey Archer and Major Charles Ingram, dubbed ‘the coughing major’.
In 2003, he conducted a series of interviews with pop singer Michael Jackson for the controversial ITV documentary Living With Michael Jackson.
He later moved to the US where he co-anchored the current affairs show Nightline on ABC before moving to MSNBC. He resigned from the corporation in 2013 with an apology for calling former US vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin a ‘world-class idiot’.
He subsequently returned to the BBC as the broadcaster’s religion editor.
It is not known when Bashir contracted the virus but he had been quiet on social media in recent weeks, with the BBC only confirming that he was ‘seriously unwell’ tonight.
Worrying data from the Department of Health shows that a second wave in Britain is continuing to grow, with 21,331 more positive tests announced yesterday, taking the daily average to 18,235.
Professor John Edmunds (left) told MPs on the Science and Technology Committee today that he would not use the three-tier local lockdown system being used by Prime Minister Boris Johnson (right)
The deaths of another 241 people were confirmed, a rise of more than two thirds (68.5 per cent) from the same day last week.
The Office for National Statistics estimates that around 27,900 people are catching the virus every day in England, its highest prediction since they began in May.
All indicators – across positive cases, deaths and hospital admissions, are they highest they have been for at least four months.
Professor John Edmunds, an epidemiologist based at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and member of Number 10’s scientific advisory panel, said that he fears the three-tier lockdown system – introduced this month by Boris Johnson instead of leaning towards national measures – will not squash the UK’s second surge.
‘I think we are not being as cautious as I would like us to be,’ he said.
‘I think it’s pretty clear cases have been going up quite fast. What worries me a little bit is where the strategy leads to at the moment.
‘So the targeted strategy, the tiered strategy, if you think it through – where that leads to is a high level of incidence everywhere.
‘Because let’s say that tier three works, and keeps the reproduction number at about one – I don’t think anybody really thinks it’s going to reduce it to less than one, so let’s assume it manages to get the reproduction number to about one.
‘I don’t give a sod’: Barnsley pensioner, 83, slams new Tier-3 lockdown for South Yorkshire saying ‘I’ve not got many years left – I’m not going to be fastened in a house’
An 83-year-old woman from Barnsley has said she doesn’t ‘give a sod’ about staying at home after it was announced Tier 3 restrictions would come into force this weekend.
From midnight Saturday the South Yorkshire areas of Barnsley, Doncaster, Rotherham and Sheffield will move under Tier 3, joining Manchester, Lancashire and Liverpool.
This means a ban on household mixing indoors, travel to areas outside Tier 3, and the closure of pubs and bars, as well as South Yorkshire’s additional Tier 3 rules which include the closure of betting shops, casinos, soft play centres, and gym classes – but gyms will stay open.
Speaking to BBC News this afternoon the 83-year-old Barnsley resident said that at her age she doesn’t ‘give a sod’ and that she would not be ‘fastened in a house’ for her remaining years by the ‘ridiculous’ restrictions.
The outspoken shopper told the broadcaster: ‘I think it’s all ridiculous, we should never have been in lockdown. All the people who were vulnerable should have been helped and kept home safe.
‘And all the rest of us, i’m 83, I don’t give a sod.
‘I look at it this way, i’ve not got all that many years left of me and i’m not going to be fastened in a house when the government have got it all wrong.
‘We need…how can we get the country on its feet? Money-wise? Where’s all the money?
‘By the end of this year there’s going to be millions of people unemployed and you know who’s going to pay for it? All the young ones. Not me because i’m going to be dead.’
The unknown shopper from Barnsley said she didn’t ‘give a sod’ and thought that the lockdown should never have happened