THE BBC breached its standards by airing Bob Vylan’s hateful Glastonbury set, a probe has found.
But critics branded the internal investigation a whitewash after it only “partly upheld” complaints.

It ruled the punk-rap duo’s chants of “death, death to the IDF” — Israel Defence Forces — went beyond “generally accepted standards”.
It also judged the remarks to a baying crowd “can fairly be characterised as antisemitic”.
But it did not believe it broke BBC rules on material “likely to encourage or incite crime”.
The Editorial Complaints Unit said: “In the context of a performance at a music festival, the chanting of slogans can be regarded as primarily an invitation to endorse a particular attitude.”
But critics blasted yesterday’s report as “woefully inadequate” as it rejected the accusations of inciting violence.
Ex-BBC Television Director Danny Cohen called the chants “chilling and hugely offensive”.
He added: “The BBC claimed ‘death, death to the IDF’ is somehow not incitement to violence, a chant directed against a group of individuals who are largely Jewish.”
Comprised of Ipswich-born frontman Pascal Robinson-Foster, who performs as Bobby Vylan, and Londoner drummer Bobbie Vylan, the band have previously faced calls for them to be arrested and prosecuted.