Posted on 11/04/2014 8:30:04 PM PST by Loyalist
The executive producer of Q is taking time away from work as the CBC continues to come to grips with the scandal surrounding the shows former host, Jian Ghomeshi.
Arif Noorani has decided to take some time off while we get more clarity around the situation, said Chuck Thompson, the public broadcasters head of public affairs, in an e-mail. He said it was the producers decision.
Noorani could not be reached for comment late on Monday, but an automatic reply on his e-mail says he is out of the office this week. He has been with the program since 2007, according to his LinkedIn profile.
News of Nooranis time away comes after an intensely difficult week for CBC staff, and especially for Q, as allegations of violent sexual conduct by Ghomeshi have emerged from several women. Ghomeshi was fired on Oct. 26, and guest hosts have filled in on the program since then.
As the scandal unfolds, the CBC has promised an independent investigation, and will soon name a third-party firm to conduct the probe. In a public statement issued on Friday, CBC president and CEO Hubert Lacroix promised to hire a company with specific expertise, and to share any recommendations to improve the broadcasters policies and procedures with the public once the probe has finished.
Ghomeshi had hosted Q since 2007, and rose to become one of the corporations most high-profile figures. His romantic life had long been the subject of gossip, and at least one former employee of the show, who has remained anonymous, has accused Ghomeshi of inapprorpriate touching and sexual comments.
Nine women have spoken to media alleging they suffered violent sexual assaults or harassing behaviour from the radio host. Three women have lodged formal complaints of sexual assault against Ghomeshi with Toronto police, spurring an investigation by the forces sex-crimes unit.
Ghomeshi, whose whereabouts are unknown, said last week on his Facebook page that he intends to meet these allegations directly. He has filed a lawsuit against the CBC for breach of confidence, defamation and punitive damages, and a grievance for reinstatement through the union that represents him, the Canadian Media Guild.
The CBC has known since the spring that allegations against Ghomeshi might surface, but the public broadcaster stood by its star through the summer after he explained he participates in adventurous sexual practices but denied he had ever done so without consent.
Then, on Oct. 23, a lawyer for Ghomeshi showed CBC managers texts, e-mails and photographs of the former radio hosts sexual encounters, which he believed would prove the interactions had been consensual. The Toronto Star also reported the CBC was presented with videos of bondage and beating during sexual activities.
In an e-mail to staff last Friday, the CBCs executive vice-president of English services, Heather Conway, said the CBC decided to dismiss Ghomeshi after seeing proof that he had caused physical injury to a woman.
After viewing this graphic evidence, we determined that Jians conduct was a fundamental breach of CBCs standard of acceptable conduct for any employee, Conway told employees.
There's been a lot of talk up here about "cultural" influences that allowed Ghomeshi to prey on women unchecked, usually nonsense about "rape culture" but sometimes some sense about the "CBC culture" of liberal smugness that Ghomeshi used for protective coverage.
But take the host's Iranian background and his producer's Pakistani background and what cultural influence comes to mind?
Did the women refuse to submit to the will of allah and sharia? I don’t know enough of the background of this.
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