The Leopard and The Fox: BBC journo Mark Tully put pressure on Tariq Ali
From Tariq Ali on the role that Mark Tully, the veteran BBC journo covering South Asia had on the BBC censorship story.
"A week later Mark Tully, the veteran BBC journalist based in Delhi rang me up. He too had read the scripts and wanted to discuss it over a drink. I was advised by Robin Midgley to take this meeting very seriously and not be to provocative."
Tariq writes that Mark Tully and he met and Tully came straight to the point. He had been asked by Alasdir Milne to read the scripts. But Tully said that here was one problem. "Tully said that in the third episode " Two men, one coffin" I had alleged that the USA had given green signal for Bhutto's hanging. He said that he was in Rawalpindi at that time "and I could find no evidence of US involvement".
Tariq says, "I explained that the US embassy and its Saudi surrogate were all powerful in Zia's Pakistan and any senior military officer would confirm that Zia consulted them before hanging Bhutto." Tully disagreed. Finally, he said, "What if I tell you that if you took that section out of the series the BBC would definitely go ahead." Tariq says that he decided to tell BBC that he would scorn the idea and that was the end. BBC took the serial off air "because of libel risk."