Toronto, July 9 -- A prominent Indian-origin host of the national broadcaster CBC News quit the media outlet on Monday, accusing it of fostering a "toxic" culture marked by "tokenism masquerading as diversity". The scandal hit the national broadcaster, which is largely funded by the government, as a letter of resignation its anchor Travis Dhanraj wrote to his colleague was published across Canadian media. "This was not a voluntary decision," he said, adding, "It comes after trying to navigate a workplace culture defined by retaliation, exclusion, and psychological harm. A place where asking hard questions - about tokenism masquerading as diversity, problematic political coverage protocols, and the erosion of editorial independence - became a career-ending move." His lawyer Kathryn Marshall told media that Dhanraj planned to make a formal human rights complaint against CBC News. A spokesperson for the network denied the allegations, saying, "While we are limited in what we can say in response due to privacy and confidentiality considerations, CBC categorically rejects the accusations." Dhanraj was born in Calgary in the Canadian province of Alberta, but is of Indo-Caribbean descent with roots in Trinidad....