The Clipboard The Clipboard: False witnesses

Al-Muhajabah's Islamic Blogs Home
« Israel closes two universities, fills bombers' houses with cement | The Clipboard archives | Pentagon blocks use of witnesses in Ujaama case »
Comments (0) | Trackbacks (0 in, 0 out) | 

Email this link | Print this article | RDF

Further Reading | Elsewhere | Search Options
Add this entry to your hotlist (View your hotlist)

False witnesses

Date: January 16, 2003 | 13 Dhu-l-Qidah 1423 Hijriah
Subjects: israel, palestine

From an article1:

The fact of Palestinian resistance against a foreign occupying power is rarely emphasised. TV news viewers would have been unaware that last month Israeli soldiers killed 75 Palestinians, 14 of them children under 18. Then, two suicide bombers attacked Tel Aviv - the first such attack for six weeks. It was only when it had this "peg" that the BBC reported the rate of Palestinian casualties. Thus, suicide bombs are made to appear as the beginning of a new "cycle of violence", rather than an outcome of the occupation. (link)

How do media outlets cover Israel-Palestine? Tim Llewellyn alleges a pro-Israel bias.

Complete text of the article, False witnesses, by Tim Llewellyn

Since the creation of Israel in 1948, its supporters have been highly successful in ensuring that Israel's version of its and its neighbours' histories has been accepted as received truth. Dents have been made, notably by Israel's own historians as they have had greater access to official documents, in the Zionist myths. But they have usually been hammered out with alacrity, both by Israel and our domestic broadcasters.
Whenever Israel has been exposed as an aggressor - in Lebanon in 1978 and 1982, or during the first intifada of the late 1980s - its media doldrums have been temporary. The efforts of its spin doctors, the US government and media, in conjunction with a weak Arab communications operation, have usually combined to make Israel's broad version of events prevail.

These continue to give the impression of a struggle between equal forces: a beleaguered and misunderstood Israel, occasionally forced into excessive measures to clamp down on "terror", versus hordes of recalcitrant Palestinians careless of "western" values and endemically suicidal for obscure religious reasons. "Equivalence" is at the heart of Britain's misreporting of the crisis.

The fact of Palestinian resistance against a foreign occupying power is rarely emphasised. TV news viewers would have been unaware that last month Israeli soldiers killed 75 Palestinians, 14 of them children under 18. Then, two suicide bombers attacked Tel Aviv - the first such attack for six weeks. It was only when it had this "peg" that the BBC reported the rate of Palestinian casualties. Thus, suicide bombs are made to appear as the beginning of a new "cycle of violence", rather than an outcome of the occupation.

It was not until late one Monday night last year, when the ITV company Carlton put out John Pilger's Palestine Is Still the Issue, that TV viewers were presented with an unalloyed account of the savagery and misery that informs the daily life of the Palestinians in Israeli-occupied territory. Pilger is known as an opinionated journalist with an appetite for upsetting authority. But this programme was not "campaigning" journalism. It was a painstaking portrayal of the humiliation Israel's soldiers and politicians visit daily on the Palestinians: not just the deaths, injuries and arrests, but the intrusions of the military into every aspect of a Palestinian's life.

In response, Israel and its supporters went into over drive. Hundreds of complaints flowed in to Carlton and ITV. Carlton's chairman, Michael Green, took the unprecedented step of condemning his own company's output, calling the Pilger documentary "a tragedy for Israel as far as accuracy is concerned". An official complaint was made to the Independent Television Commission.

The ITC's ruling this week that the programme "was not in breach of the ITC programme code ... Adequate opportunity was given to a pro-Israeli government perspective" is a serious setback for Israel's struggle to present itself as the victim of violence rather than its progenitor.

Most significantly the ITC found that "due impartiality", as dictated by the 1990 Broadcasting Act, is not the same as "absolute neutrality". The ITC said: "Programme makers can come at subject matter from particular directions so long as facts are respected and opposing viewpoints represented." They were in Pilger's documentary. He used a long and revealing interview with Dore Gold, one of Ariel Sharon's leading spokesmen.

The BBC will try to find vindication in the phrase "particular directions" for a misleading film it put out last June, The Siege of Bethlehem. An Israeli TV team gained access to the army negotiators at the siege of the Church of the Nativity, and the BBC ran the film without caveat, context, explanation or the necessary distancing that an insider project of this nature demands. The Palestinians in the film were under-represented and inarticulate. The general effect was to suggest that Israeli soldiers were doing everything they could to make life easier for terrorists inside the church. The fact that military occupation of a Palestinian-controlled area had detonated the Bethlehem affair went unremarked.

So the ITC ruling is a shot across the bows of both the BBC and ITN news managers, approving a reporter's account of a violation of human rights that mainstream bulletins and current affairs discussions routinely duck.

The Glasgow University Media Group, which is to publish later this year a highly critical analysis of BBC and ITN Israel/Palestine coverage, has already found reporting so short on explanation that many viewers were not sure whether it was the Palestinians or the Israelis who were the settlers or the refugees.

The vociferousness of the Israeli embassy, charges of anti-semitism, dithering by the Blair government in its attitude to Israel's violations of international law, cultural "drift" in newsrooms that encourages editors to buy the idea that Israelis, unlike Palestinians, are western "people like us", so more deserving of sympathy, all of these militate against the willingness of journalists to present the issue for what it is: desperate resistance against a military occupation.

reference=http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,3604,875640,00.html
~ Posted by Al-Muhajabah, a fair and balanced niqabi, at 07:01 PM

Comments

No comments yet.

All comments are copyright their authors

RSS feed of comments on this entry

Finished reading and posting comments? Return to The Clipboard

Trackbacks

What is trackback?
You Pinged Me

Here's who's pinging me:

(no pings yet)


Further reading

Recent entries

The following is a list of the ten most recent entries in The Clipboard as of Mar 02, 2006:

View a list of all entries in The Clipboard

Related entries

This entry has been tagged as covering the following subjects: israel palestine. The following is a list of the ten most recent entries in Al-Muhajabah's Islamic Blogs that share any of these tags:

A semantic analysis of this entry also suggests the following keywords to search for related content on: israel, Israel, Palestinian, suicide, palestinian

What links here: View a list of other entries in this blog (if any) that link to this entry

To learn more about Israel than you read in the mainstream media, see Is Israel Really America's Friend?

Visit Western Journalists in Support of Palestine to learn more about the Palestinian cause.

Or look generally for informational pages on my website tagged with israel, palestine

Results of Semantic Search

A semantic search of Al-Muhajabah's Islamic Blogs suggests the following as the ten entries most closely related to this entry:



Elsewhere

External resources

Check out other web pages (if any) that I've bookmarked via del.icio.us that share the same tags: israel, palestine

Explore reference materials from Answers.com about these subjects: israel, palestine

Read news stories at Common Times about these subjects: israel, palestine

View search results at gada.be metasearch service for these subjects: israel, palestine

Find books at Amazon.com on these subjects: israel, palestine

Other views

Want to see what other bloggers have to say about the article I cited above? Check these resources to see lists of blogs (if any) with entries that are about this article or have linked to it.

Check Waypath for blog entries generally related to this entry, or Technorati or Bloglines for blog entries that link to this entry.

Technorati tags: View blog entries, bookmarks and photos tagged by others with the same subjects as this entry:



Search options

     

For external resources on the topic of this entry, you can run a search for its title false witnesses (Google, DayPop, Feedster) or keyword(s) israel palestine (Google, DayPop, Feedster). Or search for pages related to the cited article. DayPop is a search engine similar to Google that focuses on searching news sources and blogs. Feedster searches blogs via RSS feeds.