26 January 2011
Following a statement by the Foreign Secretary on the decision to close five language services of the BBC World Service, Geoffrey Clifton-Brown highlights the minorities who rely on the World Service for information about the western world.

Geoffrey Clifton-Brown (The Cotswolds) (Con): Does my right hon. Friend accept that the BBC World Service, along with the British Council, has a huge world reputation in exchanging views and knowledge from the western world? Does he accept also that it is not just the number of people who receive a service that counts? It is precisely the minorities in difficult parts of the world who need truth and independent advice.

Mr Hague: My hon. Friend is absolutely right, and that was one reason why I was anxious to avoid a larger scale of language service closures than those to which I have agreed. We have limited them to five language services, along with other changes to the BBC World Service, partly because of the reason he gives.

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