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Communique: 18 September 2003
CHILD GUINEA PIGS
Dear HonestReporting Subscriber,
On Monday (Sept. 15), the IDF caught two barefoot Palestinian children
― ages 8 and 10 ― breaking through the security fence from Gaza.
Why were they breaking through the fence?
Agence France-Presse reports a cruel
case of child abuse: "The boys had been sent to test the security capacity
of the fence around the Kissufim area, the Israeli army said Monday."
What AFP doesn't report, however, is the
boys' statement that an Arab man from
Gaza forced them to do it. "An adult told us to cross the fence, and if
not, he would hurt us," the boys said. IDF officials said that terrorist
elements sent the boys as "guinea pigs" to see how the IDF would react.
AFP quotes the IDF that the boys were sent "to test the security capacity
of the fence." But since there's no mention whatsoever of Palestinian
agents (who would also be interested in testing the fence), the reader has
no reason to consider that a malicious Palestinian sent the boys, and is
left assuming Israeli guilt.
HonestReporting does not wish to imply that AFP intentionally distorted
this story. However, given the sensitive and volatile nature of the
Mideast conflict, it is irresponsible for journalists to present facts in
such a vague manner ― in this case, falsely suggesting that Israel used
two innocent boys for a cruel test of IDF readiness.
Please write to AFP, requesting they clarify the matter in an official
correction:
contact@afp.com
--- BEEB-GATE: THE MIDEAST CONNECTION ---
HonestReporting readers are well aware that when it comes to major network
media bias, no one has a worse record than the British Broadcasting
Corporation. The ignominious recipient of our 2001 Dishonest Reporting
"Award," BBC News has demonized the Israeli government and IDF at every
turn ― for this, Israel officially
broke links with the BBC in June.
Who can forget the words of the veteran
BBC correspondent from Gaza who openly
admitted at a Hamas rally that "Journalists and media organizations [are]
waging the campaign shoulder-to-shoulder together with the Palestinian
people"?
Now the BBC's negligent journalism is finally coming to a head, amidst an
enormous domestic scandal that calls the network's entire future into
question. Here are our Cliff Notes on the dramatic "Beeb-gate":
ACT I: Last
September, to support the ousting of Saddam Hussein, the British
government published a dossier warning against Iraq's imminent threat to
the West.
ACT II: In covering the Iraq War, BBC News was openly hostile to
British military participation, and often supportive of the Iraqi regime.
Then, in May, BBC correspondent
Andrew Gilligan dropped a bombshell by
reporting that "a member of the intelligence services" claimed the
September dossier was intentionally "sexed up" to make a more convincing
case for military action. Prime Minister Blair's office, incensed,
launched a formal inquiry into the BBC charge.
ACT III: In July, Gilligan's "informant" emerged ― Dr. David Kelly
from the Ministry of Defense (not a member of the intelligence
services), who met the BBC reporter in early May. In an official
statement, Kelly denied Gilligan's central point - that Kelly accused the
Blair administration of willful deceit. Then three days later (July 18)
Kelly committed suicide in a forest outside
his home.
ACT IV: This week (Sept. 17), the whole BBC house of cards came
crashing down, as BBC's Gilligan
admitted before an independent judicial
board that he never had a basis for claiming governmental deceit: "The
allegation I intended to make was a spin. I do regret those words...and I
shouldn't have used them."
As writer Douglas Davis recently stated, none of
this should come as a surprise: "The BBC sees and hears what the BBC
chooses to see and hear. Israel has long since learned that
lesson...Israel might not be able to quantify the effects, however
unintended, of the BBC's deeply flawed coverage of its affairs. But for
the wife and children of David Kelly, the consequences of the BBC's
reporting can be tragically and precisely measured."
That's why HonestReporting has long maintained that BBC's distortion of
the Mideast conflict ― promoting terms like "militant" and "cycle of
violence" ― whitewashes Palestinian terror and emboldens terrorists
to further attacks.
To make matters worse, the British public pays for BBC's "journalism": BBC
is largely funded by the 2.3 billion pounds ($3.9 billion US) it receives
yearly from a mandatory 109 pound ($175) licensing fee levied upon
every UK television owner. In return,
BBC's Royal Charter demands
"authoritative and impartial coverage of news and current affairs in the
United Kingdom and throughout the world" ― a far cry from what BBC
delivers.
A BBC reporter recently revealed that "[g]oing
from a newspaper...to the BBC is like traveling to another professional
planet...What strikes you most about the BBC scene is what a closed world
it is. Walk into a BBC newsroom and you will hear more talk about the BBC
itself than about the outside world: more office and corporate politics
than real politics."
It is high time that the BBC reforms its insular, elitist culture, and be
forced to compete in the open marketplace like all other news agencies.
The public demands that BBC reporters and editors clean up their acts and
practice journalistic integrity.
The time is right to act ― BBC's Royal Charter and funding are presently
under governmental review. HonestReporting encourages subscribers to
support the cancellation or non-renewal of the charter by writing to UK
Culture Secretary Tessa Jowell:
tessa.jowell@culture.gsi.gov.uk
British citizens are further encouraged to support the
petition drive to end the TV licensing
fee that funds the Beeb.

Thank you for your
ongoing involvement in the battle against media bias.
HonestReporting.com |