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Top Gear's Clarkson branded 'irresponsible' over speed
30.01.07
Jeremy Clarkson and the BBC are at the centre of a new row after the controversial Top Gear programme was accused of sending out an "irresponsible" message that speed does not kill.
Road safety charity Brake said the BBC presenter "glamorised" speeding in his comments on Sunday night about co-presenter Richard Hammond's dragster crash - and will be making a formal complaint to the BBC.
Dramatic footage of Hammond's 288mph accident was shown for the first time on Sunday night's Top Gear.
Aired on the first show of the new series, it revealed the 36-year-old father of two's miraculous escape when he crashed while filming a stunt for the programme in September.
But Dianne Ferreira, spokeswoman for Brake, said: "Jeremy Clarkson said on yesterday's programme "speed kills" and then pointed at Richard Hammond as if to say 'speed doesn't kill".
"This glamorised speeding. The programme is watched by impressionable young people, many of whom who have just passed their test and they are mad about cars.
"They are easily influenced and remarks like that are very irresponsible and could tempt them to speed."
Brake's head of education Jools Townsend added: " Clarkson's comment was highly irresponsible and offensive to anyone who has been bereaved or injured at the hands of a speeding driver."
He said:"A shockingly disproportionate number of young male drivers are dying on our roads and it is highly irresponsible for the BBC to allow Top Gear, with its target audience of young males, to openly make light the deadly act of speeding."
He said Brake will be compiling evidence of "irresponsible dialogue" and footage from Top Gear to present to the newly-formed BBC Trust which represents the interest of the licence fee-paying public.
The Scottish Green Party also joined the attack, demanding Clarkson publicly apologise for the comments and accusing him of "childish arrogance".
Party leader Robin Harper MSP said: "Jeremy Clarkson should publicly say sorry. The glamorisation of driving at high speeds is unacceptable. People die on our roads every day and speed is often the main culprit.
"Mr Clarkson's almost childish arrogance contrasts sharply with such a serious problem."
However other road safety groups disagreed with Brake's assessment and said the "speed kills" message - which has led to more than 7,000 speed cameras across the UK, was itself seriously flawed.
It is not speed - but inappropriate speed, which is the killer, says the campaign group 'Safe Speed'.