Beware
Of The BBC: Women And Children Don’t Have To Die Under
Israeli Bombardment
30 January 2010By Stuart Littlewood
Its mission statement says: “Trust is the foundation
of the BBC: we are independent, impartial and honest.”
However, people are complaining bitterly to the BBC
about its pro-Israel stance when reporting on the
situation in the Holy Land.
Once renowned as the benchmark for fairness and
accuracy, the BBC nowadays is careless with the truth
when handling news from the Palestinian territories
illegally occupied by Israel - the West Bank, East
Jerusalem and Gaza.
We were treated to a prize example earlier this week.
The flagship 'Today' programme, which goes out
weekdays from 6am to 9am on Radio4, marked the
anniversary of Israel's blitzkrieg with a feature on
the Gaza economy, in which I heard presenters claim at
least three times that the purpose of Operation Cast
Lead was to stop the rocket attacks across the border.
Under the ceasefire Israel had undertaken to lift the
economic blockade, but didn't do so. Nevertheless
Hamas kept its side of the bargain and fired no
rockets.
So 1,400 Gazans, including some 350 women and
children, didn't have to die under Israeli
bombardment. All Israel needed to do was extend the
truce by keeping the peace and lifting the evil
blockade as promised.
But it’s not about rockets, is it? No rockets are
launched from the West Bank, yet Israel keeps the West
Bank tightly sealed and all movement cruelly
restricted under a punitive military and
administrative matrix of control.
The death and devastation inflicted on Gaza is really
about Israel’s unquenchable lust for land and its
criminal desire to subjugate, expel or annihilate the
native population.
The BBC also failed to provide accurate context
regarding the Israeli township of Sderot, the main
target for Hamas rockets. Ed Sturton reporting from
Sderot didn't explain how the land on which Sderot
stands was once a Palestinian village called Najd,
whose residents were ethnically cleansed and put to
flight by Jewish terrorists in May 1948. Many of them
ended up in refugee camps in Gaza. Sderot is therefore
a source of real grievance to the Palestinians.
Under UN Resolution 194 and also the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights the villagers of Najd,
along with hundreds of thousands of others who were
dispossessed at gunpoint, are entitled to return to
their homes but have been denied their rights by
Israel.
So, has our “trustworthy” BBC fallen under Zionist
influence? They certainly give a disproportionate
amount of air-time to pro-Israel figures such as the
Israeli ambassador, the regime’s spokesman Mark Regev,
the Chief Rabbi and assorted politicians who wave the
flag for Israel, all of whom speak good, clear
English. On the rare occasions when the BBC interviews
a Palestinian they choose someone who is
unintelligible. I can’t remember when I last heard the
Palestinian ambassador Manuel Hassassian, who speaks
excellent English and can put the Palestinian case
eloquently.
The BBC also adopts Israel's language and definitions.
Palestinians not Israelis are the militants. Hamas not
the murdering occupiers are the terrorists. A single
captured Israeli soldier is deemed more newsworthy
than the 10,000 abducted Palestinians (some of them
women and children) rotting in Israeli jails. It is
imperative that Israelis not Palestinians feel secure
within their borders. Israelis not Palestinians have a
right of self-defence.
A few years ago a study of TV news coverage by Glasgow
University’s Media Group showed how the BBC and others
distorted the Arab-Israeli conflict and misinformed
the British public by presenting the Israeli
government perspective and featuring mostly pro-Israel
politicians. Today the gap between the BBC and its
mission pledge to be “independent, impartial and
honest” seems just as wide.
Of course, none of this is news to the Palestinians. I
make these points only for the benefit of western
readers especially Brits and Americans who are victims
of media bias, and for Israelis who live on a diet of
fiction, and for Zionists everywhere who wouldn't
recognise the truth if it fell on them.
-- Stuart Littlewood is author of the book Radio
Free Palestine, which tells the plight of the
Palestinians under occupation.
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