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  • WeekDay AM: 10 Things you need to know this morning
    BBC bosses exit, a super typhoon, and Mexico’s harassment problem

     
    today’s media story

    BBC bosses exit amid row over alleged editorial bias

    What happened
    BBC director general Tim Davie (pictured above) and the corporation’s head of news, Deborah Turness, have resigned following allegations that the broadcaster showed entrenched partisanship in coverage of subjects including Donald Trump, the conflict in Gaza and debates over gender identity. The claims were raised by Michael Prescott, a former external adviser to the BBC’s editorial standards committee, whose letter, which was published in The Telegraph, criticised the editing of a “Panorama” episode that combined widely separated sections of a Trump speech from 6 January 2021. The corporation had been preparing to apologise for the edit.

    Who said what
    Davie said his exit was “entirely my decision”, but acknowledged that “the current debate around BBC News has understandably contributed” to it.

    With these resignations, the BBC “has given in”, said Jane Martinson in The Guardian. The corporation “should have stood up to The Telegraph, Trump and the Tories. Now its enemies know how little it takes for it to fold”. Conversely, the BBC “should treat this shaming as an opportunity to break free”, said Matthew Syed in The Times. It still has “many friends who would be thrilled to see it cast off the progressive blinkers”.

    What next?
    The departures come as the BBC prepares for critical negotiations with the government over long-term funding and governance. The corporation must now recruit replacements for two of its most senior editorial roles while responding formally to Prescott’s allegations.

     
     
    today’s international story

    Mass evacuations as super typhoon strikes Philippines

    What happened
    More than one million people have been moved from their homes across the Philippines as Super Typhoon Fung-wong made landfall on the eastern coast. The storm, carrying sustained winds of 115mph and stronger gusts, swept across northern Luzon late yesterday. The country is still reeling from the impact of Typhoon Kalmaegi, which struck days earlier, causing extensive casualties and leaving many people missing.

    Who said what
    Philippines Defence Secretary Gilberto Teodoro urged residents to comply with evacuation orders, saying a failure to do so would put both civilian and emergency workers’ lives at risk.

    Fung-wong is the “biggest typhoon to threaten the Philippines in years”, said The Independent. Typhoon season is year round, said The New York Times, “however, most typhoons form from early July through mid-December”. While many “scrape or strike” places like the Philippines, Japan and Taiwan, they can also hit the Korean Peninsula, China and Vietnam. The Philippines is “battered by about 20 typhoons and storms each year”, is also hit by earthquakes, and has more than a dozen active volcanoes, making it “one of the world’s most disaster-prone countries”, said NPR.

    What next?
    Schools and government offices across the Philippines are shut. The storm is expected to move north and weaken as it heads toward Taiwan later this week.

     
     
    Today’s health story

    UK already battling severe flu outbreak

    What happened
    A mutated strain of H3N2 influenza that emerged over the summer has triggered an unusually early and rapidly growing flu season in the UK. The virus, which underwent seven significant genetic changes in June, appears to partially evade immunity built up through past infections and vaccinations. Early estimates suggest that this strain spreads more easily than recent seasonal flu viruses, raising concerns that the coming months could be more challenging than usual.

    Who said what
    Professor Nicola Lewis of the Worldwide Influenza Centre said the situation “does concern me, absolutely”, calling the pattern of spread “unusual”. Professor Derek Smith of the University of Cambridge said the variant “almost certainly will sweep the world”.

    The UK is “braced for a spate of flu deaths this winter”, said Rebecca Whittaker in The Independent. Health officials are “raising alarms” because the new variant “appears to bypass existing immunity”, said Laura Zilincanova in the Daily Express.

    What next?
    The NHS has issued a “flu jab SOS”, urging people to take up available vaccination appointments.

     
     

    It’s not all bad

    The Emperor Qianlong’s long-hidden retirement garden inside Beijing’s Forbidden City has opened to the public for the first time after a meticulous 20-year restoration. Created in the late 18th century as a private retreat of pavilions, rockeries and winding paths, the four-acre garden showcases the emperor’s own designs and his eye for art and craftsmanship. Conservation teams from China and the World Monuments Fund worked together to restore more than 20 buildings. Visitors can now tour two of its courtyards, which Nancy Berliner, curator of Asian Art at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, described as a “wonder”.

     
     
    under the radar

    Sheinbaum and Mexico’s sexual harassment problem 

    The public groping of Mexico’s president has brought its epidemic of violence against women into sharp focus.

    Claudia Sheinbaum (pictured in the illustration above) was speaking to a group of supporters in Mexico City last week when a man tried to kiss her on the neck and touch her chest. Video footage “quickly ricocheted across the internet”, said Reuters, “underscoring for many in Mexico the insecurity that women face”.

    Sheinbaum said she had decided to press charges because the suspect allegedly harassed other women in the crowd. “If I don’t file a complaint, what will happen to other Mexican women?” Sheinbaum said on Wednesday. “If this happens to the president, where does that leave all the young women in our country?”

    The incident has “sparked outrage”; Mexican women saw their own experiences “reflected in her plight”, said The Guardian. For some, watching the country’s first female president being groped in public was a “personal affront”.

    Rights groups say the incident shows the “extent of ingrained machismo” in Mexico, where a man “believes he has the right to accost even the president if she is a woman”, said the BBC. Femicide is a “huge problem” – a “staggering 98% of gender-based murders” are estimated to go unpunished.

    Since Sheinbaum’s election last October, she “has made clear progress” on women’s rights, said The New York Times. But “non-lethal violence against women has hardly budged”. And of Mexico’s 32 federal entities – Mexico City and 31 states – “only 16 criminalise sexual harassment”, said Al Jazeera. Sheinbaum has now unveiled a new national initiative against sexual abuse, including a push to make harassment punishable in every state.

     
     
    on this day

    10 November 1991

    South Africa played its first cricket match since 1970 – a one-dayer against India – following the end of an international boycott over apartheid. The two-decade-long ban was lifted after the South African government agreed to dismantle the system of institutionalised racial segregation and release Nelson Mandela from prison. Last week South Africa lost to India in the Women’s Cricket World Cup final in Navi Mumbai, marking their third white-ball tournament final loss in three years.

     
     
    Today’s newspapers

    ‘Quit in disgrace’

    The Daily Mail leads on the resignations of BBC director general Tim Davie and his head of news Deborah Turness. The double resignations are the corporation’s “biggest crisis in more than a decade”, says The Telegraph. The White House is gloating that Trump “forced out” the corporation’s director general, says The i Paper. “It feels like a coup”, a BBC source tells The Guardian. “Tears of the crown”, says Metro, alongside a photo of the King saluting at the Cenotaph. “Kate wipes a tear”, says the Daily Express. 

    See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    tall tale

    Art attack

    An Australian teenager has faced court after allegedly defacing a £68,000 “mythical megafauna” sculpture, affectionately known as the “Blue Blob”, with googly eyes, according to the BBC. CCTV captured an individual putting the artificial eyes on the artwork, which is based on a “massive, lumbering and fascinating” ancient marsupial. “It is not harmless fun, it is costly,” said City of Mount Gambier mayor Lynette Martin. It is “frustrating to those members of our community who have embraced ‘Cast in Blue’”.

     
     

    Morning Report was written and edited by Arion McNicoll, Jamie Timson, Harriet Marsden, Ross Couzens and Chas Newkey-Burden, with illustrations by Julia Wytrazek.

    Image credits, from top: Max Mumby / Indigo / Getty Images; Erwin Mascarinas / AFP / Getty Images; Mike Kemp / In Pictures / Getty Images; Illustration by Julia Wytrazek / Getty Images.

    Morning Report and Evening Review were named Newsletter of the Year at the Publisher Newsletter Awards 2025
     

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