BEIJING Joey Bosa Jersey , Jan. 30 (Xinhua) -- Indian film "Secret Superstar," starring Bollywood actor Aamir Khan, dominated the Chinese film market in the week ending Jan. 28, earning 223 million yuan (about 35.2 million U.S. dollars), China Film News reported Tuesday.

Aamir Khan is one of the most recognized Indian actors in China. His last film "Dangal" was a dark horse in Chinese box office chart in 2017, raking in nearly 1.3 billion yuan.

Domestic romance "Forever Young" came in second, making 158 million yuan at the box office last week. It has sold 607 million yuan in tickets since hitting Chinese screens on Jan. 12.

The third place went to the 20th Century Fox's young adult film "Maze Runner: The Death Cure," which took in 137 million yuan in its debut week in China.

Lionsgate's "Wonder" landed in the fourth place, generating about 56.8 million yuan last week. It has made 115 million yuan since its release in China on Jan. 19.

Rounding out the top five was the animated film "Ferdinand," distributed by the 20th Century Fox, which has grossed about 118 million yuan since its release in the Chinese market on Jan. 19.

Women working for the BBC have complained they were paid less than men in equivalent jobs and have accused managers of misleading them about their pay to hide widespread gender discrimination at the public broadcaster.

The complaints by BBC Women, a group of 170 staff, were sent to parliament's media committee, which is investigating BBC pay after the corporation was forced to disclose last July that two- thirds of on-air high earners were men and that some were paid far more than female peers.

The revelations caused a spate of bad headlines for the BBC and angered many female staff, who demanded equal pay for equal work. The National Union of Journalists (NUJ) has lodged a collective grievance to the BBC on behalf of 121 women.

"While individual BBC managers have been supportive, there is still a bunker mentality in some quarters and women have experienced veiled threats made against them when they raised the subject of equal pay," BBC Women said in written evidence to parliament's media committee.

The lawmakers are due to hear oral evidence on Wednesday from Carrie Gracie, the BBC's former China editor, who quit this month in protest over being paid less than her male peers .

Senior BBC managers, including Director-General Tony Hall, are due to appear before the committee just after Gracie .

Funded by a licence fee levied on TV viewers and reaching 95 percent of British adults every week, the BBC is a pillar of the nation's life, but as such it is closely scrutinised and held to exacting standards by the public and by rival media.

The BBC said in response to the evidence submitted by BBC Women and the NUJ that it was committed to equal pay and did not accept the assertion that it had not been complying with equality laws.

In the wake of Gracie's resignation and the public debate it sparked, six of the BBC's best-known male presenters and journalists agreed to take pay cuts. That was widely welcomed, but campaigners for equal pay said it did not solve the underlying issues.

BBC Women said gender pay discrimination affected every part of the organisation, not just high earners.

The group provided 14 individual examples of women in a range of roles as TV and radio presenters and reporters, all of whom described frustrating battles with managers after discovering they were paid less than their male counterparts.

"I have co-presented with a male colleague for many years ... I estimate he's paid around double what I earn for doing the same job," said one of the unnamed women in a typical submission. "I raised the equal pay issue many times over the years, but nothing was done."

(Agencies)

Let me tell you a story about a friend of mine, who started his life as a little country boy from Nigeria. He was very poor, as most in that country are, but he worked hard and managed to get through college and earn a degree as an Investment Analyst. I'll call him Eric, but that's not his real name.

He went to work for a company in his country that did business with many other countries, handling their investments in Nigeria and the neighboring area. One day a Russian client came into the office, and was introduced to Eric.

The Russian man had a question about a contract that was prepared for use in the USA. Eric looked over it, and in two minutes told the Russian man that the contract was terrible. After some discussion about this, the Russian was so taken with Eric's abilities that he offered him a job in the USA and paid him $2,500 in cash as a sign-on bonus.

Eric was stunned. $2,500 in his country at that time was like instant wealth!

But now Eric was faced with a decision. He was a country boy, and had a hard enough time living in the city of Benin in his home country of Nigeria. He spoke English, but with a heavy accent that was sometimes hard to understand. He would be taking on some hefty responsibility for a major bank in the USA, a country he had never even visited before. He was scared to death.

What would he do? Would he decline the offer out of fear of the unknown? Would he let the risk prevent him from bettering his life and that of his family?

I got to listen to Eric's story, one on one, the other day. It was truly fascinating what he'd been through and how he'd handled it all.

Eric was happy to say that no, he had not turned down the job. He took it, and despite the trials and difficulties, he did very well with it. Now he and his family all live here in the USA, and Eric owns a prosperous mortgage loan business.

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