The Loose Women presenter has not been on the airwaves since October 6Credit: Shutterstock Editorial
Adams has hosted the three hour phone-in show on BBC Radio Scotland since 2010.

But the presenter has not been on the airwaves since October 6.

Complaints were raised against Adams, who also hosts ITV’s Loose Women, under the BBC’s Call It Out scheme, according to MailOnline.

A representative for Adams denied the allegations, and told The Sun: “No complaints have been presented to Miss Adams by the BBC.

“Further, she has worked for BBC Radio Scotland for more than 15 years and in that time has never had any issue raised about her.”

BBC Scotland refused to comment on the allegations, but confirmed Adams had not permanently left the organisation.

A spokesperson said: “We would not comment on any individual case.

“If any complaints or concerns are raised we have robust internal processes in place to manage these.”

The scheme was launched in the wake of the MasterChef scandal, which saw a misconduct probe lead to the departures of its long-running hosts.

Gregg Wallace and John Torode had hosted the cooking show since 2005, but they were axed over inappropriate behaviour.

It comes after the BBC was sanctioned by Ofcom over a controversial Gaza documentary that was deemed to have breached broadcasting rules.

The documentary Gaza: How to Survive a Warzone faced backlash after it was revealed its narrator was the son of a Hamas official.

The broadcaster spent £400,000 of licence payers’ cash making the doc, which was branded a “propaganda show” for the evil terror group Hamas.

It was revealed the main narrator was 13-year-old Abdulla Eliyazour – the son of senior Hamas official Dr Ayman Al-Yazouri.

Ofcom said the failure to disclose the position of the boy’s father was “materially misleading”.

It means the BBC will be forced to broadcast a statement of Ofcom’s findings on BBC2 at 9pm on a date to be decided by the regulator.

In response, the Beeb said it “accepted Ofcom’s decision in full”.

Adams has previously spoken out on ITV’s decision to slash the Loose Women line-up as part of a major shake-up of its daytime programming.

Sweeping changes meant the female-led, lunchtime talk show will only air for 30 weeks a year.

It meant the full 26-strong pool of presenters and panellists would no longer be required.

Speaking on her podcast How to be 60, Kaye said she felt as though ‘the rug had been pulled’ from underneath her.

She confessed: “It did come out of the blue. I didn’t anticipate it, which is probably stupid in retrospect. You get into a sort of rhythm of life.

“I had a couple of sleepless nights I have to say, because it’s just like the rug’s been pulled from under your feet – what has been familiar.”
Kaye Adams presenting the television program 'Loose Women'.Kaye Adams has been removed from her BBC Scotland Radio show, it is reportedCredit: Shutterstock Editorial