Fadi Gujjar is from Jaurah in Pakistan's Punjab region. In his 30s, his real name is Khawar Hassan - though he also goes by Bishi Gujjar.
BBC News later concluded that he did not influence its reporting of Kids Company.In 2021, the founder and former trustees of the charity, including Yentob, were
Yentob continued to make many more programmes for the broadcaster, and was subsequently appointed a CBE in 2024 for services to the arts and media.He is survived by his wife, TV producer Philippa Walker, and their two children.A new exhibition celebrating "the misfits and the oddballs who didn't really fit in anywhere" has opened in Liverpool.
For Your Pleasure, which "explores queer club culture of the 1990s", has been curated by Martin Green and James Lawler from DuoVision for the Open Eye Gallery.The pair, who have worked with the LGBTQIA+ creative community since 2012, curate exhibitions by what they describe as undervalued artists, photographers and designers, aimed at engaging with a wider audience.
They said their creative company was "all about celebrating people from the queer community, the people who don't fit in with anything, but create amazing work".
Club culture was an integral part of their world, as Green was also a DJ and ran the influential '90s club Smashing, while Lawler avidly frequented clubs in London and the North West.Yentob said the speculation over his conduct - which included claims he had tried to influence the BBC coverage of the charity's demise - had been "proving a serious distraction" when the BBC was in "particularly challenging times".
BBC News later concluded that he did not influence its reporting of Kids Company.In 2021, the founder and former trustees of the charity, including Yentob, were
Yentob continued to make many more programmes for the broadcaster, and was subsequently appointed a CBE in 2024 for services to the arts and media.He is survived by his wife, TV producer Philippa Walker, and their two children.