A senior BBC employee who penned a series of antisemitic Facebook posts that included calling Jewish people “Nazi apartheid parasites” who funded a “holohoax” no longer works for the news corporation.
Dawn Queva, a senior scheduling coordinator and playout planner at BBC Three, peddled troubling antisemitic conspiracy theories on social media for several months up until she departed from the company on Sunday.
Queva’s posts — which also attacked white people, deeming them a “virus” and “mutant invader species” — were shared with her employer last week amid calls for her removal from the organization, which confirmed her exit to The Telegraph on Monday.
“The individual concerned is no longer employed by the BBC,” a BBC spokesperson said in a statement.
The unsettling social media posts made by Queva, whose since-deleted profile appeared under the name Dawn Las Quevas-Allen, go back nearly a decade, according to screenshots shared by Deadline, which first reported the incident.
In one rant, Queva called Jewish people “Nazi apartheid parasites” and accused them of funding a “holohoax.”
She also referred to Israel as “Israhell,” in a 2014 post and made several other updates criticizing Israel and Zionism.
“The Zionist genocidal land squatting so called Jew’ irrespective of the fact that The UKKK and Amerikkka gave away land they had no god given right to a people who have no god given right to,” Queva wrote in one post, according to screenshots shared by Deadline.
Queva — who once worked for A+E Networks, UKTV and Disney — repeatedly disparaged white people, whom she deemed a “virus” and a “mutant invader species.”
Several of her posts also refer to Great Britain as the “UKKK,” in reference to the Ku Klux Klan and in another she wrote that white people were a “barbaric bloodthirsty rapacious murderous genocidal thieving parasitical deviant breed.”
Queva appeared to respond to the reports about her previous posts on Friday, when she updated her Facebook wall with a video from the 1987 movie “The Garbage Pail Kids” alongside a caption that read “only those who live a lie hate the truth!”
She also commented below to add an infographic supposedly listing Jewish slave ship owners, as well as the infamous photo of Gordon, an escaped slave with a heinously scarred back due to years of abuse.
Queva’s alarming social media posts are believed to have been circulated in BBC WhatsApp groups created in the wake of Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack on Israel.
The BBC was under scrutiny for its coverage of the attack and subsequent war — and Director General Tim Davie has held “listening meetings” to address the perceived bias in its work, according to Deadline.
There have also been recent reports that 22 employees at the national broadcaster have filed complaints about antisemitism in the workplace, the Telegraph added.
“We don’t comment on individual members of staff and we have well-established and robust processes in place to handle such issues, we do not tolerate anti-Semitism, Islamophobia, or any form of abuse and we take any such allegations seriously and take appropriate disciplinary action wherever necessary,” a BBC spokesperson told The Post.