BBC Breakfast presenter Naga Munchetty was forced to apologise to viewers on Saturday morning

BBC Breakfast’s Naga Munchetty returned to the famous red sofa on Saturday morning with co-presenter Charlie Stayt. However, the programme wasn’t without its problems, and the presenter was forced to say sorry to viewers.

The popular weekend programme experienced some technical troubles during the latest live transmission on Saturday, August 30. They had been carrying out a crucial video interview with Enver Solomon, the CEO of the Refugee Council, when the programme encountered technical issues.

Certain parts of Naga’s on-air discussion with Enver were extremely difficult to follow after the video-link connection seemed to fail in places, reports the Express.

To wrap up the interview, Naga said, “Enver Solomon, chief executive of the Refugee Camp, thank you very much.” She added, “Apologies for the sound quality of that connection, but I think we got most of what Enver Solomon was trying to say.”

Naga Munchetty
Naga issued on-air apologies to viewers

Enver appeared on the programme to express his viewpoint about the migrant row that is currently causing a major divide all across parts of the UK, as more protestors gather at asylum hotels, including Epping, Essex, and Cheshunt, Hertfordshire.

The latest protests coincided with the Court of Appeal decision, in which the government successfully overturned a temporary injunction that would have prevented asylum seekers from being housed at the Bell Hotel in Epping.

Since then, three arrests have been made in Essex after protests escalated.

Naga was keen to waste no time and wanted to gather Enver’s thoughts immediately. She asked him, “Good morning to you. What is your reaction to this latest ruling?”

Enver Solomon
Enver Solomon detailed a plan his teams had delivered to government

As the CEO attempted to deliver his opinion, it became extremely difficult to understand what he was trying to convey as his connection seemed to falter significantly in parts.

He said through a bad connection: “Well, I think it is clearly a conflict for the government, but I don’t think it really solves the challenge that we’re facing.

“I don’t think it addresses the community’s concern and frustration with the situation. It hasn’t addressed the fact that the taxpayer is having to pay millions of pounds for hotels, and those that are in the hotels feel they’ve got a target on their backs.”

Naga Munchetty and Charlie Stayt
Naga Munchetty issues apology to viewers(Image: BBC)

The CEO further urged, “We work with them, and we know how they feel. They feel very anxious and disturbed by what’s going on, and they don’t want to be in that position either.

“So really, I think this has to be about the government reaching its commitment to close its hotels by 2029, which is a number of years away.”

Naga was keen to address where people waiting for asylum should go if hotels were to close. Enver told her that his teams had already proposed a plan to the government that he described as a “one-off reset” that would put in place an “exceptional scheme to grant people from countries that are very likely to be given permission to stay as refugees.”

He estimated that this regime would remove ” 30,000 from the asylum complication system” and could be achieved in “just a few months.”