The contrast to reactions to the killing of over 120
Palestinians, including many women and children, in occupied Gaza the
previous week could hardly be more striking. On one day alone, 60
people died in a hail of Israeli firepower using F-16 planes, Apache
helicopter gunships, tanks, armoured bulldozers and ground troops.
No
Western leader was heard condemning the Israeli assault on Gaza as “an
attempt to strike a blow at the very heart of the peace process.” To
our knowledge, no reporter suggested that “the peace process” had now
“died”. No headlines screamed of Palestinian babies “murdered” in their
beds. In short, news reports from the Gazan bloodbath typically lacked
the anguished details and tone that suffused the reporting from
Jerusalem less than a week later.
Nor was there the same
heightened pitch and intensity of news coverage following Israel’s
deadly ‘incursion’ into Gaza in mid-January. 17 Palestinians were
killed in one day, and around 50 injured, while President Bush was
visiting the region. Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president, said:
"What happened today is a massacre, a slaughter against the Palestinian
people. "Our people cannot keep silent over these massacres. These
massacres cannot bring peace." (
Al-Jazeera, ‘Abbas: Israeli raid “a massacre” ’, January 15, 2008)
But for the Western media the massacres that really matter, the
ones which “strike a blow at the very heart of the peace process”, are
those inflicted on Israelis.
The BBC’s Propaganda Role
The humanitarian crisis in Gaza is now at its worst since the
occupation by Israel began in 1967. More Gazans are dependent on food
aid than ever before: fully 1.1 million out of a population of 1.5
million. Hospitals are suffering the longest power cuts yet
experienced, record levels of raw sewage are being pumped into the sea,
and the economy is at its most dire with unemployment set to exceed 50
per cent. (‘The Gaza Strip: A Humanitarian Implosion’, March 6, 2008;
http://christianaid.org.uk/images/gazareport.pdf). Is it any wonder
that the people of Gaza are in despair?
Our alert of March 3 highlighted the lack of attention given to the
latest assessment by John Dugard, the UN Special Rapporteur on the
Occupied Territories. Palestinian terrorism, while abhorrent, is the
“inevitable consequence” of Israeli occupation, noted Dugard. He
warned: “the collective punishment of Gaza by Israel is expressly
prohibited by international humanitarian law.” (
Media Lens media alert, ‘Israel’s Illegal Assault On The Gaza “Prison”’)
The BBC’s official response to our challenge about its neglect of Dugard’s vital analysis was telling:
“We
missed the original publication of John Dugard's report, but are
intending to write about its formal presentation to the UN later today.
“Mr Dugard has, of course, repeatedly made very critical comments about Israel, some of which
we have reported.
“It is fair to point out however that Mr Dugard's views are not those
of the UN. Under international law, an occupied community is not
allowed to adopt terrorist methods against the civilian population of
its occupier. Occupied people remain under an obligation to conduct
themselves according to the laws of war. So, while terrorism may be an
‘inevitable consequence’ of the occupation, that does not mean it is
somehow legitimate. The UN, including the secretary general and the
security council, have repeatedly condemned suicide bombings and rocket
fire from Gaza: " (
Email from “The BBC News website” [no name provided], March 6, 2008)
This response is noteworthy, even for the BBC's usual shameful
record. There was no mention of Israel’s responsibilities as the
occupying power, or its repeated and brutal transgressions of
international and humanitarian law over forty years. Human rights
groups, such as Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and B’Tselem
in Israel, have documented many grave breaches of the Fourth Geneva
Convention, constituting war crimes. Little of this fundamental context
ever makes it into BBC news reports.
Instead, the BBC focused
exclusively in its reply on the obligations of “an occupied community”
which has been continually attacked and impoverished by an Israeli
state that is massively supported – financially, militarily,
diplomatically - by Washington. The anonymous BBC official who wrote
that “while terrorism may be an ‘inevitable consequence’ of the
occupation, that does not mean it is somehow legitimate” was answering
a strawman argument of his or her own invention. Neither Media Lens nor
the UN Special Rapporteur claimed that Palestinian terrorism was
“legitimate.” Indeed, had the BBC employee read the report, he/she
would have seen that Dugard had condemned Palestinian rocket attacks on
Israel’s civilians as “war crimes”.
As promised, the BBC news website did indeed write about the Dugard
report; it devoted all of 168 words at the bottom of a short news item.
The item noted blandly that unspecified “scheduling problems” meant
that the report would now be presented to the UN in June rather than
this month. (
BBC Online, ‘UN alarm at Gaza-Israel violence’, March 6, 2008).
For the Special Rapporteur’s assessment to be shunted to one side by
the ‘international community’, even as the slaughter in the Middle East
continued, was horribly ironic. The possibility that power politics
might have been at play in the alleged “scheduling problems” appears to
have eluded the media’s scrutiny.
The Eternal BBC Claim: “We Will Not Be Cheerleaders For Anybody”
Jeremy Bowen, the BBC’s Middle East news editor, received numerous
emails that were copied to us. Many were in direct response to our
alert, but others were sent spontaneously by people appalled at the
coverage they were seeing and hearing from the publicly-funded
broadcaster. After the killings at the Jewish seminary, Bowen defended
the corporation’s recent unbalanced news coverage from the region:
“In
the last week, we have reported very fully from inside Gaza as well as
from Sderot and Ashkelon. We will continue to report on the
Palestinians in Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem. But we will
also report fully from the Israeli side. The BBC's reporting will be as
impartial as we can make it. We will not be cheerleaders for anybody.”
(Email, March 6, 2008) Bowen’s assertion simply does not stand up to
scrutiny. In our March 3 alert, we cited the testimony of former BBC
Middle East correspondent Tim Llewellyn who pointed out that ‘balance’
is “the BBC's crudely applied device for avoiding trouble”. This
inevitably leads to a clear news bias towards the viewpoint of power
residing in Israel, Washington and London.
The
public can see for themselves the ‘neutral’ media language used to
describe Israeli actions: ‘incursion’, ‘retaliation’, ‘military
operations’. By contrast, Israel endures ‘terrorist attacks’,
‘slaughter’, ‘a bloodbath’. Careful analysis by Greg Philo and Mike
Berry, of the Glasgow University Media Group, found a persistent, ugly
pattern:
“In our samples of news content, words such as ‘mass
murder’, ‘savage cold-blooded killing’ and ‘lynching’ were used by
journalists to describe Israeli deaths but not those of
Palestinians/Arabs. The word ‘terrorist’ was used to describe
Palestinians, but when an Israeli group was reported as trying to bomb
a Palestinian school, they were referred to as ‘extremists’ or
‘vigilantes’.” (Philo and Berry, ‘Bad News From Israel’, Pluto Press,
London, 2004, p. 259)
The reality is that by devoting
disproportionate coverage to Israeli deaths over Palestinian deaths,
the BBC’s claims to “impartial” reporting are simply demolished. With
great consistency, lives in the ‘Third World’ are presented as being of
far less importance than those who are ‘like us’. At its most brutal,
we see a deeply racist attitude that also underpins the culture of
killing in the U.S. occupation of Iraq. Major General Bargewell's
report into the massacre of 24 Iraqi civilians in Haditha by U.S.
marines gave a glimpse of the prevailing mindset:
“Iraqi
civilian lives are not as important as US lives, their deaths are just
the cost of doing business...” (Josh White, ‘Report On Haditha Condemns
Marines; Signs of Misconduct Were Ignored, U.S. General Says,’
Washington Post, April 21, 2007)
And while the BBC and other
news media continue to pump out propaganda about the Middle East, the
“cost of doing business” is only too obvious to the victims and anyone
who cares about them.
SUGGESTED ACTION
The goal of Media Lens is to promote rationality, compassion and
respect for others. If you do write to journalists, we strongly urge
you to maintain a polite, non-aggressive and non-abusive tone.
Write to: Jeremy Bowen, BBC’s Middle East news editor
Email: jeremy.bowen@bbc.co.uk
Write to Helen Boaden, BBC news director
Email: helenboaden.complaints@bbc.co.uk
Please send a copy of your emails to us
Email: editor@medialens.org
The Media Lens book ‘Guardians of Power: The Myth Of The Liberal Media’
by David Edwards and David Cromwell (Pluto Books, London) was published
in 2006. John Pilger described it as: “The most important book about
journalism I can remember.” For further details, including reviews,
interviews and extracts, please click here.