On CAMERA Column
Most of the 143 million worldwide listeners who tune each
week to the BBC World Service, including more than 3.5
million in the U.S. via public radio stations, would
probably accept the British network's claim that it is
"the world's most successful and widely trusted
international radio" service.
And the trust that these listeners place in the BBC's
crisply-accented
reporters would seemingly be justified by the network's
Royal Charter, which requires it to be "a credible,
unbiased, reliable, accurate, balanced and independent
news service."
At odds with these high-minded words, however, is the
disquieting fact thatthe World Service is funded directly
by "Foreign Office grants." While,predictably,
there is a claim of editorial independence from what
amounts to Britain's State Department, the BBC's
guidelines acknowledge that World Service "aims and
priorities must be agreed with the Foreign and
Commonwealth Office. The BBC is, therefore, answerable
for the World Service to the Foreign Office, Parliament
and taxpayers."
It is hard to imagine a greater conflict of interest than
a news organization specializing in international
coverage being funded by, and directly answerable to, its
country's foreign policy arm. Unfortunately, the long
tradition of anti-Israel and even anti-Jewish bias at the
Foreign Office does seem to have had an impact on the
BBC's Middle East coverage.
Consider, for example, the BBC's broadcast and now
yearlong defense of afalse story filed on June 5, 1997 by
Stephen Sackur, then the BBC's Jerusalem Bureau Chief. As
part of his report marking the thirtieth anniversary of
the Six Day War, Mr. Sackur interviewed Mohammed Burkan,
accepting without question Burkan's claim that the
Israeli government had stolen his home in Jerusalem:
Sackur: An awkward meeting in the old city of Jerusalem,
thirty years after Israel's military conquest. We
returned with Mohammed Burkan, to the house he owned
before 1967. Now a Jewish family lives there... .
Burkan: (translated) No, I don't hate the Jews who live
here. They are not to blame for what has been. I hate the
Israeli government because it took my house. No Muslim
has the right to give up one inch of Jerusalem.
Apparently Mr. Sackur and his editors were unaware that
Mr. Burkan had,more than 20 years earlier, brought his
case to the Israeli courts, culminating with an appeal
before Israel's High Court. At each stage Mr. Burkan's
charges were found to be baseless, a key piece of
evidence being a letter sent by Mr. Burkan on June 16,
1968 to Israel's then prime minister and finance
minister, in which Burkan stated that he had been living
in a rented apartment on the site in question, and only
since 1963.
Other evidence cited in the appeal (HC 114/78) also
contradicted Mr. Burkan's claim that the home had always
been owned by Muslims. According to Land Registry records
from the time of the British Mandate, the land and home
in question were owned by a Jewish family that was driven
out during the Arab riots of 1938.
The BBC was informed of the facts surrounding Burkan's
claims the day after the program aired. In response,
network officials steadfastly defended Sackur's report,
initially arguing that it referred to a home different
from the one dealt with in Burkan's court appeals.
However, the network ignored repeated requests to provide
the address of this other home so that Land Registry
records could be checked.
Apparently unable to produce evidence of the second home,
the BBC then offered a new defense of Sackur's report:
"The section of Stephen Sackur's report that you are
questioning should be seen in the context of the report
as a whole... the short section... dealing with Mr.
Burkan was illustrativeof general issues of land and
property ownership in territories occupied by
Israel."
That is, even if the Burkan story is fiction through and
through, it
doesn't matter because the fiction is
"illustrative" of a higher truth,
that Israel has dispossessed native Palestinians,
stealing their land and
homes. And stories which support that higher truth,
however false, are evidently acceptable to the BBC.
Indeed, the misreporting of the Burkan case and
subsequent journalistic dereliction are not anomalies.
BBC journalists have long expressed their animus towards
Israel both in their reporting, and in revealing actions
after leaving the region. Thus, Tim Llewelyn, twice the
BBC's Middle East correspondent, has repeatedly expressed
extreme hostility toward Israel since his departure from
the network in 1992. Last year, for example, at a London
conference entitled "The Palestinians: A Continuing
Exodus 1948_1997," Llewelyn, who chaired one of the
sessions, declared "everything Israel is doing today
is aimed at getting the Palestinians out of
Palestine." Referring to his review of a book
written by the former Israeli President Chaim Herzog, who
had recently died, Llewelyn exclaimed, "I have just
given his book a good banging. Three days later he
died!" -- drawing applause and appreciative laughter
from his audience.
It is telling that such statements did not disqualify
Llewelyn from writing for the BBC website a series of
essays titled "Israel at Fifty," which
predictably declare that the "Judaisation of Arab
East Jerusalem proceeds apace," characterize Israel
as an "implant in the Middle East," and explain
American support for Israel as based not on shared
democratic values but on the power of the "Jewish
lobby."
But, biased and false anti-Israel reporting, and virulent
statements from its former chief correspondent in the
Middle East, are unlikely to have displeased either the
World Service or its sole source of funds, the British
Foreign Office, whose policy in the region has long been
profoundly hostile towards Israel and Zionism.
This hostility was manifest even in pre-state days, when
Britain kept as a highest secret detailed reports of Nazi
Germany's systematic genocide of the Jews. According to
recently declassified documents the British government
was aware of the developing Holocaust almost from its
first days, but said and did nothing.
During the war the British government actually acted
against the rescue of Jews, for fear that survivors would
cause problems elsewhere, especially in the Middle
East. Thus, in December 1943, the British
government opposed the evacuation of Jews from Rumania
and France because "the Foreign Office are concerned
with the difficulties of disposing of any considerable
number of Jews should they be rescued from enemy occupied
territory." Less than a year later, as the
annihilation of European Jewry neared completion, a
Foreign Office memo declared that "a
disproportionate amount of the time of this office is
wasted on dealing with these wailing Jews."
These anti-Jewish policies and sentiments were hardly
aberrations. Sir John Troutbeck, for example, head of the
British Middle East Office, characterized Zionist actions
in the region as "unashamed aggression carried out
by methods of deceit and brutality not unworthy of
Hitler." And Edward Grigg, British Minister Resident
in Cairo, predicted that partition "would very
likely bring into existence a Jewish Nazi-state...."
With the British foreign policy establishment harboring
such animus towards Jews and the Jewish state, and able
to determine the "aims and priorities" of World
Service coverage, it is difficult to imagine how BBC
reporting on the Middle East could be anything but deeply
biased against Israel. Hiring reporters with the extreme
malice exhibited by Mr. Llewelyn only ensures this
After evidence of the BBC's dereliction
and stonewalling in the Burkan casewas forwarded to the
Corporation for Public Broadcasting and Congress, a
ranking BBC official promised that "senior managers
in BBC News" will reexamine the issues and compose a
"detailed reply." Whatever the character of
that new reply from the BBC, it is difficult to reconcile
the British network's evident conflict of interest and
biased reporting with U.S. laws requiring that CPB-funded
programs adhere to standards of "strict objectivity
and balance."
Until the BBC World Service is removed from the purview
of the Foreign Office, and until it desists from biased
reporting, broadcast of the network's programs should not
be subsidized by American taxpayers.
Copyright 1998, Committee for Accuracy in Middle East
Reporting in America. All rights reserved. Permission
granted to reproduce and reprint provided that proper
attribition is included.
www.camera.org
Leiah and Jason Elbaum IRIS
<http://come.to/israels.security>
<http://www.netaxs.com/~iris/>
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