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| The Australian Broadcasting Corporation is incredibly popular Down Under (AFP Photo/Saeed KHAN) |
Australia's much-loved public broadcaster scrambled to safeguard its hard-won reputation for impartiality Thursday, forcing out a chairman accused of intervening in news coverage to please the government.
Top
executive Justin Milne told the ABC he would step down, after the institution's
board held crisis talks in Sydney and the government announced an inquiry into
his actions.
According
to leaked emails, Milne unsuccessfully pressed for the sacking of two senior
reporters over coverage that did not please his friend, Malcolm Turnbull, then
the prime minister of the current centre-right government.
Milne on
Thursday told the ABC the crisis had been a "firestorm" and said he
"wanted to provide a release valve".
The almost
century-old Australian Broadcasting Corporation is incredibly popular Down
Under, with polls showing it is not just the most trusted news organisation in
the country, but also seen as a national treasure.
ABC
journalists demanded Milne go on when the revelations became public on Wednesday.
Initially
the Liberal Party-led government stopped short of publicly forcing that move,
announcing that its Department of Communications would conduct an inquiry
"to establish the facts in these matters".
After
appearing to be on the fence, Prime Minister Scott Morrison said the ABC and
Milne had "made the right call" in changing leadership.
"Time
for the ABC to resume normal transmission, both independently and without bias.
That is what Australia’s taxpayers pay for and deserve," he said.
Acting centre-left
opposition leader Tanya Plibersek demanded an independent investigation into
what happened.
"The
ABC is not the propaganda arm of the Liberal party of Australia. It is our
national broadcaster. Australians love their ABC. They are, rightly, very
protective of its integrity and independence."
Milne did
not directly address the allegations in a written statement, but insisted the
board had worked to ensure the independence, interests and continued funding of
the organisation.
Around 70
percent of Australians want a strong ABC, despite government spending cuts and
daily withering criticism from its commercial rivals -- who baulk at what they
see as unfair competition from the taxpayer-funded behemoth.
The current
crisis began with the unceremonious ouster earlier this week of ABC managing
director Michelle Guthrie, reportedly pushed out by Milne due to her poor
relations with Canberra and a range of internal managerial missteps.
But her
departure was followed by a wave of alarming leaks about Milne's conduct and
his closeness with the Liberal government.
The tumult
has prompted handwringing about the future of the public broadcaster and raised
questions about whether the board should be replaced wholesale.
It has also
prompted questions about the ramifications of Australia's bareknuckle politics,
with its frequent backstabbing.
"It's
about a civic culture that is slowly falling apart: a political class with
fewer civic boundaries, less concerned with the independence of institutions,
and a muscular intolerance of dissent," politics lecturer Waleed Aly
wrote.

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