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Is the BBC Pro-Israel?
UPI editor Martin Walker got op-ed space in the Times of London to slam the idea that the BBC coverage is biased in Israel’s favor. Walker ably fisks the methodology used for the independent panel's report.
The Times
May 11, 2006
The BBC pro-Israeli? Is the Pope Jewish?
Martin Walker
Despite a catalogue of examples to the contrary, the governors insist there is bias against the Palestinians
THE OFFICIAL REPORT for the governors of the BBC on its coverage of the Palestine-Israeli conflict found predictably that there was “was little to suggest systematic or deliberate bias” but then went on to list a series of measurements by which the BBC could be said to be biased in favour of Israel.
This produced mocking guffaws in my own newsroom, where some of the BBC’s greatest hits — or perhaps misses — remain fresh in the memory. There was the hagiographic send-off for Yassir Arafat by a BBC reporter with tears in her eyes and that half-hour profile of Arafat in 2002 which called him a “hero” and “an icon” and concluded that the corrupt old brute was “the stuff of legends”.
There was Orla Guerin’s unforgettably inventive spin on the story of a Palestinian child being deployed as a suicide bomber, which most journalists saw as a sickening example of child abuse in the pursuit of terrorism. Guerin had it as “Israel’s cynical manipulation of a Palestinian youngster for propaganda purposes”.
There was the disturbing case of Fayad Abu Shamala, the BBC Arabic Service correspondent, who addressed a Hamas rally on May 6, 2001, and was recorded declaring that journalists in Gaza, apparently including the BBC, were “waging the campaign shoulder to shoulder together with the Palestinian people”. Pressed for an explanation, the subsequent BBC statement said: “Fayad’s remarks were made in a private capacity. His reports have always matched the best standards of balance required by the BBC.”
There was the extraordinarily naive coverage of the London visit of Sheikh Abdur-Rahman al-Sudais, the predominant imam of Mecca, to open London’s largest new mosque. He was described as a widely respected religious figure who works for “community cohesion”, and a video on the BBC website was captioned “The BBC’s Mark Easton: ‘Events like today offer grounds for optimism’.”
The BBC must have missed his sermon of February 1, 2004, that said “the Jews of yesterday are the evil fathers of the Jews of today, who are evil offspring, infidels . . . calf-worshippers, prophet-murderers, prophecy-deniers . . . the scum of the human race whom Allah cursed and turned into apes and pigs . . . These are the Jews, a continuous lineage of meanness, cunning, obstinacy, tyranny, licentiousness, evil, and corruption . . .”
These are isolated examples, but they stick longer in the memory because they are reinforced by a broader pattern of coverage that seems to play down that Israel is a democracy that elects Israeli Arabs to the Knesset and which does not engage in systematic terrorism and suicide bombing of civilians. So it was startling to read the report for the BBC governors finding so much bias in favour of Israelis. This was based largely on the quantitative content analysis done by outside researchers which found “significant differences across BBC news programmes and services in the allocation of talk time”.
The detailed survey found disparities (in favour of Israelis) in the amount of talk time given to Israelis and Palestinians, and that “Israeli fatalities generally receive greater coverage than Palestinian fatalities”.
The methodology of the survey may be a complicating factor. The period analysed went from August 2005, the time of the Israeli withdrawal from Gaza, and January 2005, when Ariel Sharon had his stroke and the Palestinians held their elections. The greater use of Israeli voices in this period seems reasonable when the big stories were the domestic political implications for the settler movement of the Gaza withdrawal and of Sharon’s eclipse. And given the media-wise presence of the Peace Now movement and Israel’s lively democracy, much of that nominally “Israeli” talk time would have been highly critical of the Sharon Government.
Moreover, the terms of reference of the report that the BBC governors commissioned excluded both the BBC World Service and the international TV channel BBC World, although it did include the BBC website. This excluded a large fraction of the BBC’s international coverage along with the often more detailed coverage that the World Service provides.
It is important to consider the context of the report’s finding that Israeli deaths tend to get more coverage is that the Israeli victims are overwhelmingly and deliberately civilians, targeted at random. The Palestinian fatalities vary widely. Some are killed in internal feuds between Hamas and Fatah, and some are executed as “collaborators”, some are terrorists caught in the act and some are the victims of Israeli targeted killings. These tend to be the ones that result in the tragic collateral killing and wounding of civilians and children. And it can be difficult for journalists, even those with the resources and exemplary bravery and professional persistence of most BBC reporters, to establish which is which in time for a news report.
The report on which the governors will now rely to develop new guidelines for BBC coverage tends to skate over some of the professional problems that make even-handed reporting difficult in Gaza and in the West Bank. Journalists have been kidnapped and cameras stolen, and their sources are often intimidated.
By contrast, Israeli politics are easily followed in Israel’s free press, where critics of the occupation and of Israeli military tactics abound and where the Israeli media does sterling work, including the kind of combative investigative reporting that is virtually unknown in the Palestinian press.
There is one piece of good news. BBC reporters will henceforth be allowed to use the T-word to describe “relevant events, since it is the most accurate expression for actions which involve violence against randomly selected civilians with the intention of causing terror for ideological, including political or religious, objectives, whether perpetrated by state or non-state agencies”.
But even here BBC reporters will be faced with a tricky dilemma, since the report goes on to say: “While those immediately responsible for the actions might be described as terrorists, the BBC is right to avoid so labelling organisations, except in attributed remarks.”
So think of the poor hack on deadline in a flak jacket trying to remember whether to say some crazed Jihadist killer was “a terrorist from Hamas” rather than “a Hamas terrorist” while squeezing more historical background and more Palestinian talk-time into the news report. It’s amazing that the coverage is as decent as it is, and that most of us in the business concede privately that, for all its flaws, the BBC still does a better job that any other news organisation on Earth.
Martin Walker is the Editor of United Press International
Posted at
11:26 AM
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That must be the joke of all time, also, Have you noticed they interview only ultra lefty Anti Israel "Israelis", to show that they supposedly show an "Israeli view"?
Posted by: Carla at May 12, 2006 9:18:46 PM
The BBC is so anti-Israeli I get sick everytime I make the mistake of openning its web page or watching its TV channel.
Public funds help the Bib keep its nose sky high and ignore any standard of human decency or a moral compass.
Posted by: Amir at May 15, 2006 6:53:01 PM
I am not surprised at anything involving the BBC. I wonder what they will say concerning the new Latin HITLER visiting his friend the mayor of London, also a known bigot and anti semite. Its rather humorous that the BBC sees nothing immoral or out or sync with reality in this visit. I would like to have posted BBC email address, as well as those of the other papers in London, so that some of us can express our outrage. I doubt if it will ever get into their paper, but its worth the try.
Ed Stoler
Posted by: E. Stoler at May 15, 2006 7:23:52 PM
The BBC is a leftist bad joke, financed by a tax hiding under the name of a licence, and if the government of this bannana republic formerly known as Great Britain, enforced crime laws with a small part of the zeal they persue suspected licence dodgers this would be a safe country indeed. Dont expect the BBC to be anything other than pro terrorist, that is where their heart lies,
Chris Edwards
Posted by: Chris Edwards at May 15, 2006 7:54:08 PM
It's a sad state of affairs when an outfit as big as the BBC is not able to see their fallacies. So what hope is there for them to change? I'm sorry to say none.
Posted by: Phillip Gaskins at May 15, 2006 9:00:48 PM
HOORAY FOR MARTIN WALKER! It is about time someone kicked the arse of the BBC. They have no shame! There was a time you would have trusted your life to the BBC! Today, feh! How the mighty have fallen!!!!
Posted by: Debby Mayer at May 15, 2006 11:32:31 PM
The BBC balances anti-Israel views of “Palestinians” with anti-Israel views of “Israelis”; it bends to both homegrown pro-“Palestinian” activist censorship and PA nose- and camera-breaking thugs. BBC regards even lynched pro-Israel Arabs (“collaborators”) as victims of Israeli attacks. It promotes extraordinary bigots like Sheikh Abdur-Rahman al-Sudais and admits its own openly opinionated correspondent’s “reports have always matched the best standards of balance required by the BBC.”
And yet, Mr. Walker thinks “the BBC still does a better job that any other news organization on Earth.”
What a bunch of … those other organizations should be then?
Or his last sentence was just a requirement aimed to pledge loyalty to the taxpayer-fed Sacred Cow?
Posted by: Michael Shtalman at May 15, 2006 11:54:36 PM
I think what is most amusing is that you can link to the Palestinian National Authority's website from the BBC's Middle East news section. Have you read any of it? All very well to say that you are not held responsible for others' content, but most of this is unbelievable, particularly the statistics and if America knew. Comparing deaths of one people intent on the destruction of another with a democratic state is hardly comparable. Next thing they'll be blaming Israel for deaths during Palestinian infighting, although this has been going on for years. Close down the PNA and there would be no jobs, makes the EU look understaffed!!!
Posted by: Matt Jefferson at May 16, 2006 12:13:08 PM
BBC only reports biased articles against Israel . It lies in what it says and also in what it does not say . The latest report on BBC, admits an underlying bias for labelling terrorists against Israel and Jews as "activists", never as terrorists . The BBC makes it clear that it regards Hamas as a respectable organisation only regarded by "some" EU and by the USA as a terrorist organisation. Still what can one expect from an organisation dedicated to plundering TV owners of a "jizya"licence fee, used to finance propaganda and to brainwash its viewers to accept the unexceptable dished out by their invisible bosses.
Posted by: Peter S. at May 16, 2006 12:32:17 PM
BBC , stands for Biased Broadcasting Corporation .
This broadcasting corporation learned its trade from Dr.Goebbels.
Highly anti-semitic , displaying an unbridled poorly hidden hatred for Jews in general and Israel in particular.
Posted by: Peter S at May 16, 2006 12:38:56 PM
The Beeb was once a respectable organisation, but now it zealously distorts the facts according to its liberal left agenda (I don't think I've ever read/heard something positive about Israel from this organisation). I simply can't stomach listening to their lies anymore and instead rely upon other more trustworthy sources for information about the true situation within the Middle East and Israel in particular.
Posted by: Hilary W at May 16, 2006 4:19:15 PM
I don't know if anyone noticed the following paragraph from the Israel-Palestine Impartiality Report:
"In fact the commission of a terrorist act, however reprehensible, may be the work of a moment, and it is a truism that many who have carried out terrorist acts have subsequently become respected
politicians, even statesmen. (This is as true of those active in the Zionist movement before the foundation of the state of Israel as in others.) For similar reasoning, it would be a mistake to use the expression “terrorist” in respect of organisations, even though the terrorist act was carried out at their instigation."
This is a fine example of the disease of moral equivalence which has infected the West to an incredible degree. Here the learned authors of the Report compare Jewish actions like the blowing up of the King David Hotel with Arab actions like the blowing up of Jewish women and children.
Maybe they don't know that the King David was being used as a headquarters by the British who were warned to evacuate the hotel a number of times, but chose to stay, declaring that they would not take orders from Jews.
Maybe they also don't know that a Palestinians will deliberately seek out the time and place where he can kill and maim the greatest possible number of Jewish civilians, sparing nobody.
Anyone who regards these two acts as equivalent has no moral compass.
This is the URL of the Report:
http://www.bbcgovernors.co.uk/docs/reviews/panel_report_final.pdf
Posted by: Bryan at May 17, 2006 10:32:56 AM
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