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BBC Web Site Articles Convey Anti-Israel MessageNovember 25, 2008 |
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IN BRIEF | to / Top / In Detail / Action Item |
Shalom CAMERA email team:
If one were to depend solely on the BBC for information about the Arab-Israeli conflict, one might understandably come away with the impression that Israel is at the root of all evil in the Middle East. Articles about Israel featured daily on BBCs Web site typically fall into two categories: 1) those condemning Israel for its military practices, government policies or supposed intolerance; and 2) those depicting the alleged decline of Israeli society or its cities. On the other hand, articles about Palestinians tend to fall into two different categories: 1) those highlighting Palestinian grievances; and 2) those minimizing the Arab threat to Israel. Many fall into more than one category at the same time, for example, articles that both highlight Palestinian grievances and condemn Israel. Taken together, these grossly unbalanced articles present an obvious anti-Israel message. |
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ACTION ITEMS | to / Top / In Brief / Action Item |
1) Submit a comment/complaint online to http://www.bbc.co.uk/complaints/make_complaint_step1n.shtml protesting the Web sites cumulative anti-Israel slant, evidenced by the choice of articles posted as background/context in the features and analysis section of the Middle East webpage. In fact, it is the lack of context in these background articles that misleads readers.
In articles devoted to the detrimental effects of closures upon Palestinians, for instance, a single sentence ascribed to Israel about its reason for closing the border hardly constitutes a sufficient framework for appreciating the rocket siege under which Israelis are living. There is rarely, if ever, any context provided about how Palestinian rocket attacks affect civilians within Israel. And there is rarely, if ever, any context about Israels complete withdrawal from Gaza in 2005. 2) Alternatively, submit a comment/complaint online about any of the articles linked below. Dont forget to send a copy of your comment, with the time and date you submitted it to letters@camera.org. |
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IN DETAIL | to / Top / In Brief / Action Item |
Factual errors and bias:
A typical array of recent articles in late November 2008 in the Features and Analysis section of the Web site included the following: Gazans despair over blockade typifies BBCs (and reporter Aleem Maqbools) pattern of highlighting Palestinian grievances and blaming Israel. The formula: a) present an individual account of Palestinian suffering, b) generalize to the Palestinian population as a whole, and c) blame Israel. In the article, a Gaza aid worker complains of having no electricity and little food. Maqbool then states that since June 2007, Israel has allowed little more than basic humanitarian aid to enter the Gaza Strip and criticizes Israel, claiming that despite the Hamas truce, Israel’s strict restrictions on the movement of goods and people into and out of Gaza largely remained. While Maqbool perfunctorily mentions Israeli concerns Israel’s government says its Gaza closure strategy aims to deter Palestinian militants from firing rockets across the border at Israeli towns he quickly discounts them Few take Israel’s explanation, that it is only protecting its citizens from the horror of rocket attacks, at face value. What Maqbool never once mentions is that Gaza is also bordered by Egypt to the south. And while Egypt is not victimized by continued rocket attacks, it nevertheless routinely seals its border with Gaza. (See BACKGROUNDER: The Rafah Crossing and Restrictions on Cross-Border Movement for Gaza Palestinians ) Gazans describe life under blockade is yet another article highlighting Palestinian grievances. Comprised of four personal anecdotes, the feature is introduced as a description of how Gazans have been affected by Israels renewed blockade of the territories. It includes only one sentence, attributed to Israel, explaining the reason for the closures Israel says the closures are prompted by rocket fire into Israel by militants in Hamas-controlled territory. A Gazan bakery owner, a shop worker, a taxi driver, and an unemployed father of six each describe the difficulties they face due to lack of fuel and power cuts. BBC articles consistently blame Israel for the humanitarian crisis in Gaza. Ignoring Israels complete withdrawal from the Gaza Strip in 2005, BBCs working assumption remains that it is Israels responsibility to provide for those in Gaza, even though they are sworn to its destruction and terrorize its population with cross-border missile attacks. There is never any suggestion in BBC articles that Egypt, Gazas other bordering country which is not similarly threatened by Palestinian aggression–take some responsibility in providing Palestinians with their needs. Palestinian life: Splits and barriers distorts both international law and historical context to present an indictment of what it calls Israeli occupation. In the first half of the article, BBC bureau chief Jeremy Bowen presents an emotive account of a wheelchair-bound Palestinian boy who must travel the long way around to school instead of the direct route because of an army barrier. (While Bowen acknowledges that the IDF removed the barrier after the familys request, he claims credit for this action, suggesting that it was only as a result of the BBCs broadcast of the boys travel to school.) Bowen reveals his bias, as well as his ignorance of international law and history, when he wrongly declares that A small community of Israelis lives in the centre of Hebron, in defiance of international laws that forbid an occupying power to settle its own people on the territory it has captured. While Bowen and the BBC consistently mislead their audience by asserting that Jewish habitation of biblical Israel is illegal, internationally renowned experts on jurisprudence and international law have declared otherwise. (See BBC Editor Sets Tone for Biased Reporting ) Moreover, Hebron one of Judaisms four holy cities was inhabited by Jews for thousands of years. This continuous Jewish habitation was interrupted only in 1929, when Arab rioters massacred their Jewish neighbors as British soldiers stood by, putting an end to the Jewish community. An attempt to re-establish the community lasted only five years, as further Arab riots in 1936 led to the Jewish communitys evacuation by British forces. After Jordan occupied Hebron in 1948, Jews were barred permanently from living there. It was only after Hebron came under Jewish control in 1967 that the community was re-established. BBC presents as fact an uncontested (some might say, racist) viewpoint that denies Jews the right to reside in a city where their ancestors lived for millenia. Does Bowen consider the ethnic cleansing of Jews from Hebron (in 1929 and 1936) and the Jordanian banning of Jews from Hebron to be illegal, or does he only view Jewish habitation in this ancient city as an unlawful act? Holy City facing splits and decline presents what the reporter describes as a gloomy picture about the Holy City by highlighting individuals grumbling about Jerusalems soaring land prices, dirty streets, economic stagnation, job shortages, the flight of the city’s young people and secular Jews, as well as the citys traffic jams. Of course, there is no city in the world where one does not find individual complaints about prices, government services, economic policies, etc. The airing of such complaints as part of a routine negative portrayal of Israeli society, policies, and cities seems to reflect a pervasive anti-Israel culture within the ranks of the BBC. Other articles on the Features and Analysis page included Rice bids farewell to Middle East about U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rices failure to achieve a peace agreement between the Israelis and Palestinians and a profile of Jerusalems new mayor, Nir Barkat which pertained more to current news events than features providing background or context. |