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Manchester Evening News
Manchester Evening News
National
Kieran Isgin

BBC's Clive Myrie hits back after viewers question why he had been sent to Ukraine

Clive Myrie has hit back after viewers questioned why he had been sent to Ukraine.

While usually a host for Mastermind, the BBC game show host delivered detailed reports from Kyiv shortly following the start of Putin's brutal invasion of Ukraine.

Some viewers had questioned why Clive Myrie was sent to Ukraine to cover the war, seemingly under the impression that his main job was being a game host. Now, that he has returned from the Ukrainian capital after stating it was no longer safe for him, he has now spoken out about the complaints regarding his coverage.

Speaking on BBC Radio 4's Today Programme, he defended his position and pointed out how he has been a journalist for more than 30 years before taking on the role of Mastermind host, Wales Online reports.

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When asked by Today presenter Nick Robinson, who had also reported live from Ukraine: "Are you having some people coming up to you saying 'what's that bloke from Mastermind doing out in a war?"

Myrie replied: "I'm struggling to find the words to deal with this kind of question, because at the end of the day... I've been a journalist for 30 years. I'm actually a journalist not a presenter."

Clive Myrie during his live report from Kyiv, Ukraine (BBC)

He added: "I know that there have been complaints from some people saying why has a presenter gone out to report on the war. I am a reporter as well."

"My job is not to sit behind a desk reading a damn autocue. It's to get out there and tell stories and I do it all the time," he told the radio show this morning.

The 57-year-old had spent two weeks reporting from the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv and is now back in London, travelling to Romania after leaving Ukraine via Moldova.

Writing for the BBC, Myrie recalled the fear palpable among those sheltering in make-shift bomb shelters in Kyiv. He wrote: “There was a real fear foreign saboteurs were moving among the population and anyone caught outdoors would have been arrested."

He added: “You could see the nervousness on the faces of the soldiers and partisans manning checkpoints, despite the black balaclavas shielding them from the cold. Their eyes told stories of apprehension, concern, worry and existential threat.”

At the time, Myrie was staying in a basement car park in the centre of Kyiv which had been turned into a makeshift bomb shelter.

Reflecting on the constant threat of attack from Russian forces, Myrie wrote: “The city was awash with rumour and dread. Who might that be in the bomb shelter next to you, who is listening in to your conversation in the bread queue? Best stay indoors and observe the curfew.”

He continued: “Villages, towns and cities across the land saw a vanishing, as citizens descended underground to subterranean worlds of refuge.”

Myrie specifically recalled a woman he had seen feeding birdseed to pigeons after the lifting of a weekend-long curfew.

He wrote: “I can’t get the image of the woman feeding the pigeons out of my head. She was risking bombs and missiles to feed the pigeons.

“For me, she represents strength and courage – the indomitability of an independent state, not the cowering fear of the colonised.”

In a tweet, Myrie later thanked members of the public for the support he received during the time he spent in Ukraine.

Keep up to date on the latest Ukraine news via our live blog:

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