BBC exemplifies anti-Palestinian bias

By Linda S. Heard, Special to Gulf News
Published: January 26, 2009, 23:14

By refusing to air an appeal for Gaza relief by the Disasters Emergency
Committee (DEC) that umbrellas numerous charities including the British
Red Cross, Save the Children and Oxfam, the British national broadcaster
has displayed its lily-livered editorial colours. Ironically, the BBC
has refused the DEC's request on the basis that it does not want to show
bias on this sensitive political issue. 

Over 100,000 Palestinians homeless, 5,000 requiring medical care and up
to one million without the basic necessities of life, yet Britain's
national broadcaster has chosen to turn its back on them for fear of
offending its pro-Israel viewers. Heaven forbid Israelis and their
cheerleaders should be miffed over anyone who wants to alleviate
suffering inflicted by lame-duck Israeli leaders flexing their muscle in
the hope of winning votes! 

The BBC's management has also rejected the urging of government
officials, parliamentarians, clergy, thousands of protestors, and over
11,000 written complaints from the public. It is not alone. At the time
of writing only ITV, Channel 4 and Channel Five have agreed to run the
appeal. 

The Archbishop of York Dr John Sentamu chastised the BBC, saying, "This
is not an appeal by Hamas asking for arms but by the Disasters Emergency
Committee asking for relief." 

Channel 4's seasoned journalist Jon Snow described the BBC's decision as
"ludicrous" and founded on "complete ignorance". 

Snow is one of a handful of television journalists who has been prepared
to investigate how Israeli propaganda has influenced the West's
reporting of the Gaza massacre. His recent video report Unseen Gaza
(available on the internet) is a jewel. 

It shows how Western reporters were barred from entering Gaza during
Israel's onslaught and were instead treated to a display of mangled
metal purported to be exploded Hamas rockets and a fat folder of Israel
Defence Forces press releases before being corralled by Israeli security
some distance away from the Gaza Strip. Interestingly, though, there has
been an absence of on-air complaints by Western news desks; those same
networks that condemned Zimbabwe for banning their journalists. 

Snow rightly dismisses Israel's claim that its restrictions were put in
place for the safety of reporters. He suggests the Israeli government
was fearful of allowing impartial on-the-ground coverage in light of the
heart-breaking stories that emanated from Lebanon in 2006 contributing
to that war being cut short.

Israel's gag attempts prove that it does not want the results of its
handiwork to appear in the public arena. When interviewed by Al Jazeera,
Israel's Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni attacked that network for its
unvarnished footage of Palestinian victims. The last thing Israel wants
from an international public relations perspective is televised appeals
depicting Gaza's incineration at a time it is being accused of
committing war crimes. 

Shamefully, the BBC and other British networks have pandered to the
Israeli government's position by rejecting the DEC appeal, whereas
previously they have aired those relating to Darfur, Zimbabwe and the
Democratic Republic of Congo. 

As Snow points out, Western channels have sanitised the conflict.
Whereas, Al Jazeera or Press TV won't hesitate to show the mangled or
charred bodies of babies, the BBC, Sky News and CNN prefer a fleeting
glimpse of, say, an infant's shoe or a teddy bear amid the rubble. This
translates to Western audiences being unable to relate emotionally to
the full extent of the horror. 

A story relegated to the internet that will forever be etched in my mind
is that of a traumatised young girl, around 13 or 14, picking through
the wasteland that was once her home to find mementoes of her dead
parents and brothers. She had no-one left except her grandmother; yet
sight of the ginger family cat elicited a moment of sheer joy. It was
poignant yet somehow hopeful. 

Western networks have often bent over backwards to display what they
call "balance" during this conflict by attempting to equate Gaza's utter
devastation with, say, a roof blown off a house in Ashkelon or Sderot.
At the same time, they invariably follow video of Palestinian children
crying for their dead parents with footage of tearful Israeli kids upset
at having to sleep in a bomb shelter. Notice, too, how they frame
strikes on a virtually unarmed caged population by the most powerful
military in the region as a "war against Hamas"! 

Snow is the only interviewer to my knowledge who seriously challenged
the absurd claims of that smug Israeli spokesperson Mark Regev
concerning Israel's use of white phosphorus in heavily populated areas,
the destruction of the UN school as well as Israel's official party line
that Hamas has been using civilians as human shields. 

When an uncharacteristically agitated Regev asked "How do you know that
some of these injuries weren't caused, for example, by Hamas munitions"?
Snow responded thus: "Mr Regev are you now saying it is not the Israelis
who dropped the phosphorus and the fragmentation bombs, it was Hamas& Is
that your allegation?" At last, a courageous voice in a colourless sea
of media ninnies! If only there were more. 

As for the BBC, once the most respected television and radio broadcaster
in this region, it has lost all credibility. It should no longer be
known affectionately as "Aunty Beeb" when it's behaving more like a
toothless, gutless "hard-hearted Hannah". 

Linda S. Heard is a specialist writer on Middle East affairs. She can be
contacted at [email protected]. Some of the comments may be considered
for publication.

 

 

Thanks & Regards,

 

 

Kunhi Mohammed

 


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