FILE - In this file photo dated May 24, 2006, Tony Hall, chief executive of the Royal Opera House in London receives a CBE. The BBC has chosen a former head of its news division to lead the broadcaster as it struggles to recover from a child abuse scandal. Tony Hall, currently chief executive of the Royal Opera House, was announced as the BBC's new director-general on Thursday Nov. 22, 2012. (AP Photo/PA, Stefan Rousseau, file) UNITED KINGDOM OUT NO SALES NO ARCHIVE
FILE - In this file photo dated May 24, 2006, Tony Hall, chief executive of the Royal Opera House in London receives a CBE. The BBC has chosen a former head of its news division to lead the broadcaster as it struggles to recover from a child abuse scandal. Tony Hall, currently chief executive of the Royal Opera House, was announced as the BBC's new director-general on Thursday Nov. 22, 2012. (AP Photo/PA, Stefan Rousseau, file) UNITED KINGDOM OUT NO SALES NO ARCHIVE
LONDON (AP) ? The BBC chose a former head of its news division Thursday to lead the broadcaster through a "long, hard look" at itself as it struggles to recover from a scandal stemming from its coverage of child sex abuse.
Tony Hall, currently chief executive of the Royal Opera House, will start his new job as BBC's new director-general in March, Chris Patten, chairman of the governing BBC Trust, said.
Hall, 61, worked at the BBC for 28 years, including a decade as director of news before taking the Royal Opera post in 2001. He succeeds George Entwistle, who resigned on Nov. 10 after just 54 difficult days as director-general.
The new director said the organization has had a "difficult few weeks," but would recover.
"This organization is an incredibly important part of what makes the United Kingdom what it is," he said. "And of course it matters not just to people in this country, but to tens of millions around the world too."
The BBC has been shaken by controversy over a decision by its Newsnight program not to run a report that one of its former stars, Jimmy Savile, was a serial sexual abuser of young women and by its recent broadcast of a program that wrongly linked a prominent politician to child sex abuse.
Entwistle resigned after failing to convincingly explain these failings, which had damaged public confidence in the broadcaster.
In a memo to staff, Patten said the BBC needed to restore its focus on "making great programs."
"In doing this, it will need to take a long, hard look at the way it operates and put in place the changes required to ensure it lives up to the standards that the public expects. Tony Hall is the right person to lead this," Patten said.
"As an ex-BBC man he understands how the corporation's culture and behavior make it, at its best, the greatest broadcaster in the world," he added. "And from his vantage point outside the BBC, he understands the sometimes justified criticisms of the corporation ? that it can be inward-looking and on occasions too institutional."
Until Hall arrives in March, the chief executive of BBC Worldwide, Tim Davie, will continue to serve as acting director-general.
Hall, who was appointed to the House of Lords two years ago, will be paid 450,000 pounds ($718,000) a year as director-general.
The BBC and Entwistle have been criticized for his final payoff of the same amount. He received a year's salary upon departure, twice as much as he was entitled to by contract.
BBC is funded in large part by a "license fee" paid by TV users.
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